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Line Sheet
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Lauren Sherman Lauren Sherman

Hi, and welcome back to Line Sheet. In today’s issue, Rachel “Rachel@puck.news” Strugatz takes a behind-the-scenes look at Estée Lauder Co.’s failed merger with Puig, and what’s next for the conglomerate. Rachel knows all! Up top, I’m reading between the lines of Goldman Sachs’ state of the union report on the luxury sector, and what the death of Donald Newhouse could mean for the future of Condé Nast. Also, Malique Morris has an update on that Matches relaunch that is supposed to happen. We will see…

A reminder that I am interviewing the one-and-only Alex Eagle for a live taping of Fashion People tomorrow night at Bicester Village, a shopping emporium I’ve never been to but have always wanted to visit. I will be buying jeans at Saint Laurent if I am lucky. If you want to attend—the event starts at 5 p.m. in The Apartment—email my colleague Eric Van Gelder at Eric@puck.news.

Also mentioned in this issue: Charlotte Tilbury, William Lauder, Princess Anne, Roger Lynch, Jonathan Newhouse, Heidi O’Neill, Steven Newhouse, Anna Wintour, Reddit, Luca de Meo, Alexia Niedzielski, Chip Wilson, Stéphane de La Faverie, The Vampire’s Wife, Joe Wilkinson, Jeff Bezos, Stefano Rosso, El Confidencial, Mario Maher, Henry Zankov, Herrish Patel, Julien Dosenna, and more.

 

Three Things You Should Know…

  • What “selective growth” looks like: Goldman Sachs’ recent big report on the state of the luxury industry underscored many things we already knew but nevertheless needed to be told: Brands with a wealthier customer base (Hermès, Brunello Cucinelli, Richemont) are faring better than those that serve more-aspirational consumers (Kering, the LVMH Fashion Group); hard luxury is stronger than soft luxury; and the U.S. market has remained resilient. (The last point is especially good news for soft luxury brands including Dior, Gucci, and Bottega Veneta, which are all performing in the region.)

    While the report’s authors don’t expect brand polarization to go away any time soon—no, there won’t be an industry-wide Chanel effect—they did underscore that luxury is expected to return to single-digit growth this year. A lot will depend on what happens in the Middle East, but I’d argue that the report simply reflects the new reality: Consumers are not going to trade up unless they are really, truly compelled.

    The authors also noted that there is a “unique opportunity for new luxury brands to disrupt the industry,” calling out everyone from Kallmeyer to The Row. Sharp pricing and design will determine who wins.

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  • Donald Newhouse’s death and Condé Nast’s future: A photographer asked me yesterday afternoon over coffee if I thought Jeff Bezos was really going to buy Condé Nast—publisher of Vogue, GQ, Vanity Fair, etcetera—as has long been rumored without any real basis in various fashion circles. I said that I doubted it. People close to the Newhouses, who own the publisher through their holding company, Advance, have always told me that the family would never sell. However, I’ve covered enough family-owned businesses to know that “never” can be an ephemeral term: Once there isn’t someone from the family running an entity, the chances of it being sold increase exponentially. I told the photographer that perhaps the calculus might change after Donald, the last Newhouse of his generation, eventually passed away. Hours later, the family announced his death. He was 96.

    Nearly everyone reading this is familiar with Si Newhouse, Donald’s older and more star-struck brother, who was the chief architect behind Condé Nast. Donald ran the family’s once incredibly profitable, bread-and-butter newspaper unit. The next generation of Newhouses have also been deeply involved: Jonathan Newhouse ran Condé Nast International, and had ambitions to take his uncle Si’s place; Steven, Jonathan’s cousin and Donald’s son, is now the chairman of Advance and controls the fate of the company.

    I’m sure the Newhouses would insist that they love the business, that it’s part of their heritage, etcetera. But they’ve also spoken in terms of capital allocation. In recent years, as Condé Nast has consolidated, the family has made a tremendous amount of money on investments in Reddit and Warner Bros. Discovery. In the old days, Condé Nast executives were encouraged to operate with decadence. Now the family ostensibly preaches profitability, which has become the dominant talking point in C.E.O. Roger Lynch’s various media appearances. So the Newhouses may still see themselves as stewards of important cultural assets, but the further they get away from the daily operations, the likelier it is that they will eventually give up the “we’ll never sell” mantra. Nothing lasts forever. Let’s see what happens after Anna Wintour eventually steps aside; perhaps they’ll keep The New Yorker and sell everything else.
Malique Morris Malique Morris
  • A Matches update: When I first wrote about the mysterious relaunch of Matches under elusive entrepreneurs Joe Wilkinson and Mario Maher, who founded the Hulcan luxury group, I was told the duo was targeting a Q3 or Q4 debut. Now, I’m hearing that the two men—who received $150 million from Frasers Group, LVMH Luxury Ventures, and Stefano Rosso and the Hermès family to revive the British retailer—told some industry insiders that the relaunch won’t happen until next year. (Hulcan declined to comment.)

    The delay is not a good look, but it’s also not entirely surprising. Hulcan’s plans were opaque to begin with, and several brands that once sold at Matches were unwilling to work with the retailer again after losing millions in unsold inventory when it shuttered in 2024; some labels, including The Vampire’s Wife, even went out of business. I previously reported that Wilkinson and Maher told a prominent brand operator that they would start buying inventory this month, but when I reached out at the time, they denied it. I’ve now heard that at least one key consultant, who was part of the previous Matches regime and is said to be working on the new project, is no longer involved. (Hulcan declined to comment.)
Lauder Ship
Down

Lauder Ship Down

News, notes, finger-pointing, and post-deal recriminations stemming from the failed combination of The Estée Lauder Companies and Puig.

Rachel Strugatz Rachel Strugatz

For the past two months, the intense mutual heavy petting between The Estée Lauder Companies and Puig, which would have potentially created the largest prestige beauty conglomerate in the world, was discussed as if the deal were a fait accompli. And yet many of the details hadn’t been ironed out: the acquisition cost, the leadership structure, the complicated interpersonal dynamics between two family-controlled conglomerates, etcetera. Nevertheless, the industry never seemed to contemplate that the merger might not happen. The prevailing notion was that these were sensible and well-capitalized companies whose overlords and management teams would eventually resolve the thorny particulars.

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Then, last week, the Spanish publication Expansión reported that discussions hit a potentially insurmountable roadblock over Charlotte Tilbury, the brand and the person. In short, Tilbury—the founder, president, chairman, chief creative officer, and “sole founder” of Charlotte Tilbury Beauty, according to the brand’s website—was in the midst of a contract renegotiation with Puig, which had acquired a majority stake in her company in 2020. She still owns 20-ish percent of her namesake makeup brand, and the transaction would have triggered a change-in-control clause that would have led to a payout of close to $1 billion. (The brand was most recently valued at $4.6 billion.) This represented an astronomical sum for a founder to make in a second exit. Within two days, both parties confirmed that negotiations had been terminated. E.L.C.’s shares jumped nearly 12 percent on Friday, while Puig’s dropped nearly 13 percent.

Publicly, Lauder’s alleged refusal to pay out Tilbury became the scapegoat. But that’s not the whole story. I heard that a lot of issues came to light during negotiations, from the price to governance to how exactly the new entity would operate. “They were in due diligence, and Lauder had everyone’s contracts,” said a person familiar with the negotiations. “Charlotte’s contract—that she still owned part of her company and that there was a change-in-control clause—was a known fact from the very beginning.” (A spokesperson for Puig declined to comment, and a spokesperson for The Estée Lauder Companies did not respond to a request for comment.)

Anyway, a source with close ties to Lauder said there was also a lot of internal grumbling that the organization would have trouble “absorbing” a merger because “there’s already been so much change too quickly.” A high-level insider also suggested that Puig was dissatisfied with the proposed price, and envisioned enough risks with the combination to curb its enthusiasm. “I believe that both sides wanted to run away from each other the more they got to know each other,” the insider said, perhaps slightly hyperbolically. “I actually think there was more pushback from Puig than Lauder, and Puig thought they were getting a raw deal––but the way it wound up playing out is that E.L.C. refused them.”

Meanwhile, there’s plenty of recrimination-filled chatter that usually accompanies any felled deal. To wit: In March, Spain’s El Confidencial reported that Puig could become the largest shareholder in the business amid a consolidation, and I’ve heard that the Lauder family wasn’t thrilled with their potential dilution. Other sources suggested that the two families may have “become equal financially,” but one Lauder insider said that this structure could have been a challenge for William Lauder, who has controlling voting rights. That said, another high-level source insisted that William was all in. “I know that William Lauder and Stéphane [de La Faverie] wanted it really badly,” this source said.

The Ripple Effects

The implosion of the deal may open the door for Unilever, the C.P.G. giant, to consolidate its dominance in the beauty space. The conglomerate recently sold off its food business to McCormick, has close to $16 billion to spend on M&A, and hasn’t been shy about signaling its deal lust. Herrish Patel, the company’s top North American executive, recently said the company is intent on going “further and wider” in the beauty category, and a number of recent stories have, rather accurately, described Unilever as “beauty’s challenger conglomerate.”

Indeed, according to the person with ties to Lauder, the latest banker gossip is that L’Oréal was never threatened by a potential Puig-Lauder union. Instead, Unilever’s ambitions have been keeping French beauty executives up at night. “L’Oréal didn’t even really care that much about it, but what they’re more threatened by and discussing is Unilever—their divesting and going bigger into beauty,” this person said.

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Could Unilever, with its $124 billion market cap, ever acquire $33 billion E.L.C.? That would be a big bite, but I just started hearing murmurs fantasizing about L’Oréal’s next potential move: a possible acquisition of Shiseido, which is currently priced at a more digestible $7.7 billion enterprise value. This hypothetical may merely be inhabiting banker thought bubbles, but you can see the thesis. The beleaguered Japanese beauty conglomerate still owns a handful of strong brands that would certainly benefit from a more stable, well-capitalized parent company. (Spokespeople for L’Oréal and Shiseido did not respond to requests for comment.)

For Lauder to keep pace with the other giants in the space, M&A will be necessary. One possibility is that E.L.C. will off-load Too Faced, which could free up the company to buy a modestly priced brand—which unfortunately won’t be makeup, I’m told, despite the handful of attractive lines in the $300 million–$400 million range. For its part, L’Oréal’s acquisition of Kering Beauté “was really a threat to Puig’s business model,” said a person close to Puig, noting that the Spanish beauty giant may want to make their own move sooner than later. Of course, given that it’s still a fraction of Lauder’s size, Puig will have far more options, and could do deals with the likes of LVMH, Richemont, or Coty, which has a bunch of fragrance assets.

 

What We’re Reading… and Looking At…

Wow. Three Condé Nast union members who were fired last November after marching up to minor Line Sheet celebrity (and head of human resources) Stan Duncan and peppering him with questions (watch the video here) were reinstated so that they could resign as active employees. They also received a collective settlement worth more than $400,000. (In a note to employees today, the publisher’s human resources team said, in part, “As part of the agreement, both parties expressly denied wrongdoing and liability.”) [The Wrap]

Gucci is sponsoring the Alpine Formula 1 team. Obviously, Luca de Meo used to be the C.E.O. of Alpine. [Motorsport]

Henry Zankov is the new artistic director of Diane Von Furstenberg. [Vogue Business]

There’s rarely a desire to even consider a Pre-Fall campaign, but Julien Dosenna’s latest for Rabanne is interesting. (It was conceived in collaboration with Alexia Niedzielski.) [Rabanne]

Lululemon finally ended its proxy war with Chip Wilson. The founder got two of his board nominees a seat, and he’ll have access to incoming C.E.O. Heidi O’Neill in exchange for keeping his mouth shut for 18 months. [Lululemon]

Abercrombie & Fitch had a strange Q1. It generated its highest sales ever for the quarter at $1.1 billion, beating estimates. But year-over-year growth slowed to 2 percent thanks to the war in Iran, and net profits fell 16 percent. Still, Gen Z’s fave mall brand managed to appease investors by keeping its full-year sales and profit guidance intact. The stock jumped over 10 percent. [Abercrombie & Fitch]

Princess Anne’s sunglasses! [N.Y. Times]

 

Until tomorrow,
Lauren

P.S.: We use affiliate links because we are a business. We may make a couple bucks off them.

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