'Feeling seen again': How the beauty industry bounced back after 2020

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The beauty industry landscape evolved over the last few years as COVID-19, inflation, and recession fears weighed on the economy.

That ability to adapt to ever-changing consumer demand is now being buoyed by an appetite for luxury spending and an uptick in M&A deals.

"People are spending a lot more, and they're excited because they're also feeling seen again," Pauline Brown, former chairman of LVMH North America, told Yahoo Finance. "Whenever people feel visible, they invest in their appearance."

Prior to COVID-19, the global beauty industry was a $532 billion business, with the US being its largest market, according to the Brazilian industry organization ABIHPEC. Driven by skin care, the US prestige beauty industry amassed a total of $18.8 billion in sales throughout 2019.

Today, revenue for the beauty and personal care market amounts to $579 billion and is expected to grow by 3.53% annually, according to Statista estimates.

"There's a lot more experimentation," Brown added. "It used to be that you'd have a few products sold for newness. And I think especially with Gen Z, there's a lot more search for newness, and trial and experimentation. The trends cycled through much quicker than they used to."

A shop attendant applies lipstick on her hand for a customer to check the shade at a store in Peshawar, Pakistan May 22, 2019. REUTERS/Fayaz Aziz
A shop attendant applies lipstick on her hand for a customer to check the shade at a store in Peshawar, Pakistan, May 22, 2019. (Fayaz Aziz/REUTERS) · Fayaz Aziz / reuters

'The big gorilla': L’Oréal

The leaders of the US beauty space include Unilever (UL), Estée Lauder (EL), Procter & Gamble (PG), Shiseido (SSDOY), LVMH (LVMUY), Beiersdorf (BDRFY), Chanel, Natura & Co, and Coty (COTY).

And then there is L’Oréal (LRLCY), which is the largest cosmetics and beauty company in the world.

Like many companies, the French conglomerate took a revenue hit in 2020 as COVID-19 and supply chain disruptions weighed on sales. Yet it remained the leader and gained market share as Unilever and Estée Lauder battled for the No. 2 spot. In 2021, L’Oréal's sales rebounded to 32.29 billion euros.

"In 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic ... triggered a crisis of supply due to the widespread closure of points of sale which led to an unprecedented, if temporary, decline of the beauty market," L’Oréal chairman Jean Paul Agon said following the company's Q4 2020 results. "L’Oréal has traversed this crisis in the best possible condition and has even grown stronger."

One reason for L’Oréal's dominance has been its edge in the hair care category: It's "the big gorilla in hair" compared to rivals, Brown told Yahoo Finance.

Estée Lauder, meanwhile, has lost market share in the US to L’Oréal. In the company’s recent earnings call, Estée Lauder president Fabrizio Freda said, “We generated $3 billion in cash from operations, a 16% decrease from the $3.6 billion in the prior-year period.”