L’Oréal Groupe announced on Thursday the retirement of company veteran Carol Hamilton, effective May 1, after a 40-year career within the U.S. division of the French beauty giant.
Carol Hamilton – Courtesy
Hamilton arrived at L’Oréal in 1984, joining the consumer products division as a marketing director for L’Oréal Paris in the U.S. After 24 years of service, the executive went on to become the U.S. brand president in 2000 and then the global brand president. From here, Hamilton transitioned from mass to the world of luxury beauty, taking the helm as U.S. president of L’Oréal Luxe, in 2008.
Under her charge, the U.S. luxe business doubled in size and achieved record profitability, before Hamilton took on the role of group president in 2015, where she was responsible for supporting the global development and acquisitions of American brands in the luxe division such as Kiehl’s, Urban Decay and IT Cosmetics. In 2018, she was appointed U.S. president of acquisitions, before expanding her role in 2020, overseeing the creation of and leadership over L’Oréal USA’s new corporate office.
Opening in June 2022, the newEl Segundo, California-based initiative brought the company’s west coast-based brands all under one roof for the first time.
“Carol Hamilton’s leadership at L’Oréal has been nothing short of transformative. Her strategic vision propelled unprecedented growth for many brands in the portfolio, achieving market leadership across multiple categories. She consistently demonstrated an exceptional ability to identify and cultivate emerging opportunities, pioneer business transformation, and drive key brand acquisitions,” said David Greenberg, CEO of L’Oréal USA and President of the North America Zone.
“Beyond her sharp business acumen, Carol’s commitment to mentorship and talent development leaves an enduring legacy of leadership within L’Oréal. We celebrate her remarkable contributions and wish her all the best in her well-deserved retirement.”
Hamilton’s retirement comes just days after L’Oréal Groupe announced the appointment of Christina (Tina) Fair as president of the consumer products division (CPD) for the North America zone.
Fossil Group announced on Thursday the appointment of Joe Martin as chief commercial officer and Antonio Carriero as chief digital information officer and general manager for the EMEA region.
Fossil Group names Joe Martin as chief commercial officer and Antonio Carriero as chief digital information officer and general manager of EMEA – Fossil
In his role, effective February 17, Martin will oversee all global revenue-generating activities, focusing on building a high-performing, scalable commercial organization. He joins Fossil from Adidas where he served as senior vice president of wholesale, team services and omni operations and marketplace, North America.
Meanwhile, starting February 12, Carriero will be responsible for overseeing the company’s global technology strategy, operations, cybersecurity, and the development of future capabilities, while leading the company’s commercial business in the EMEA region. He brings extensive experience in digital transformation and e-commerce growth from his previous roles at Salomon, Breitling SA, and Richemont Group.
“The expertise and proven record of sustainable, long-term results that both Joe and Antonio bring to the company make them ideally suited to advance our turnaround strategy as we focus on building a stronger, more innovative watch business that creates long-term value for all our stakeholders,” said chief executive officer Franco Fogliato.
These appointments are a part of Fossil’s commitment to drive a successful business turnaround, returning the company to profitable growth, and creating long-term shareholder value, the company said.
Amazon.com posted sales in last year’s final quarter that topped Wall Street estimates, but investors initially drove shares down due to weakness in the cloud computing unit and a lower-than-expected revenue estimate.
Reuters
Amazon’s shares fell as much as 4% in extended trade after the report, erasing about $90 billion worth of stock market value, and were last down about 2%.
The tech company’s sales estimate for the first quarter failed to meet analysts’ expectations, even if a negative impact of $2 billion from last year’s Leap Day is included. The company said it anticipates between $151 billion and $155 billion, compared with the average estimate of $158 billion.
The company’s cloud unit, Amazon Web Services, reported a 19% rise in revenue to $28.79 billion, falling short of estimates of $28.87 billion, according to data compiled by LSEG. Amazon joins smaller cloud providers Microsoft and Google in reporting weak cloud numbers.
The cloud weakness occurs as investors have grown increasingly impatient with Big Tech’s multibillion-dollar capital spending and are hungry for returns from hefty investments in AI.
“After very strong third-quarter numbers, this quarter the growth rates all missed. That’s what the market doesn’t want to hear,” said Daniel Morgan, senior portfolio manager at Synovus Trust. He said this is particularly true after the emergence of new competitors in artificial intelligence such as China’s DeepSeek.
Like its rivals, Amazon is investing heavily in artificial intelligence software development. At its annual AWS conference in December it showed off new AI software models that it hopes will draw new business and consumer customers. Later this month, it is set to release its long-awaited Alexa generative artificial intelligence voice service after delays over concerns about the quality and speed, Reuters reported earlier this week.
Competitors Microsoft and Google parent Alphabet both posted slowing cloud growth in last year’s fourth quarter, sending shares lower. The companies, along with Meta Platforms, said costs to develop infrastructure for artificial intelligence software contributed to sharply higher anticipated capital expenditures for 2025, a total of around $230 billion between them.
Amazon’s retail business helped offset the cloud weakness, with the company reporting online sales growth of 7% in the quarter to $75.56 billion. That compared with estimates of $74.55 billion.
Amazon forecast operating profit of $14 billion to $18 billion for the first quarter of 2025, missing an average analyst estimate of $18.35 billion.
The company reported revenue of $187.8 billion in the fourth quarter, compared with the average analyst estimate of $187.30 billion, according to data compiled by LSEG.
Advertising sales, a closely watched metric, rose 18% to $17.3 billion. That compares with the average estimate of $17.4 billion.
Net income nearly doubled to $20 billion from $10.6 billion a year earlier. The Seattle retailer reported earnings of $1.86 per share, compared with expectations of $1.49 per share.
Kenvue Inc. announced on Thursday net sales increased 0.1% to $15.5 billion for the full year ended December 29, 2024, on the back of softer-than-expected sales growth.
Kenvue reports flat 2024 sales. – Neutrogena
Fourth quarter, net sales decreased 0.1%. By segment, the self-care segment and the skin health and beauty segment climbed 2.1% year-over-year to $1.59 billion in net sales, and 1% to $1.01 billion, respectively. Meanwhile, the essential health segment recorded a 4.1% drop in fourth-quarter net sales to $1.08 billion.
Kenvue-owned brands include Neutrogena, Aveeno, Band-Aid Brand, Johnson’s, Listerine, and Tylenol.
“We delivered on our 2024 profit commitments despite headwinds that resulted in softer than expected sales growth and we enter 2025 as a more competitive company with stronger foundations,” said Thibaut Mongon, chief executive officer.
“We remain focused on leveraging our increased brand investments to accelerate growth and deliver long-term value creation centered around profitable growth, durable cash flow generation, and disciplined capital allocation.”
Looking ahead, the company expects a 2025 net sales change of -1% to +1% year-over-year, with organic sales growth of 2% to 4%. Kenvue projects flat to 2% year-over-year growth in adjusted diluted earnings per share for 2025,
“As Kenvue enters our next chapter, we expect to accelerate performance throughout the year, while navigating the dynamic external environment contemplated within our outlook,” added Paul Ruh, chief financial officer.
“We expect to drive further productivity and operational efficiency gains, which will fund our planned increase in brand investments, positioning us to grow adjusted operating margin for the year.”