A decade ago, while L’Oréal stood as the clear global leader in beauty, a new set of independent brands was beginning to gain traction. Despite their at first comparatively microscopic scale, digital natives Glossier and e.l.f. Beauty, celebrity challengers such as Fenty (Rihanna) and Kylie Cosmetics (Kylie Jenner), and the jostling ranks of Korean beauty brands all had a key advantage. While L’Oréal and the other big players had marketing models based on traditional media and sales models based on brick-and-mortar retail, these competitors were perfectly adapted for the new age of social media, influencers, and e-commerce.
It sounds like the preamble to a business-school case study on disruption, the kind that doesn’t end well for the disrupted. Yet L’Oréal didn’t have its Kodak moment. Instead, despite the intensifying competition, it has consistently outperformed the $450 billion global beauty market, which itself continues to grow at 4% to 5% annually.
Today, L’Oréal remains one of the jewels in the French corporate crown, its 37 brands selling a bewildering array of potions, creams, cleansers, serums, dyes, moisturizers, mascaras, beauty devices, and more, across more than 150 countries. The group’s $47 billion turnover is nearly double what it was in 2014, comfortably outpacing the likes of Estée Lauder or Beiersdorf over the same period, and still towering above the next generation of competitors. What is it doing right?
Innovation at the core
“Beauty is an endless quest for humans, which is why the market is always evolving,” says L’Oréal deputy CEO Barbara Lavernos. Customer expectations evolve, too—who wants obsolete wrinkle cream?— but the company has kept up with and in many cases exceeded those expectations. “At the end of the day, what works in beauty is really good products,” Lavernos says.
There’s a reason 116-year-old L’Oréal was named Fortune’s most innovative European company earlier this year. Indeed, Lavernos’s own 2021 elevation from executive vice president of operations to deputy CEO, where she oversees innovation, tech, and research, is a measure of how centrally the group views product innovation in an offer-driven market. The company launched 3,636 formulas in 2024 alone.
Of course, everyone wants to be innovative. L’Oréal mostly succeeds. “L’Oréal invests heavily to make sure they can use new technologies to better identify the needs of customers; for example, with AI analyzing social media content, or to make a better formulation to address a specific need. They do this again and again with new technologies,” explains Marc Mazodier, professor of marketing and beauty chair at ESSEC Business School.
And L’Oréal’s investment is considerable. The group’s research and innovation budget is greater than those of its next three competitors combined, at €1.3 billion in 2024, or around 3% of net sales. It leans more than most toward hard science, with 4,200 researchers globally working on better understanding everything from acne to aging, even pioneering reconstructed human skin to reduce the need for animal testing.
“Beauty is an endless quest for humans, which is why the market is always evolving”Barbara Lavernos, L’Oréal deputy CEO
“You have to understand L’Oréal is born from the mind of a chemist,” Lavernos says, referring to Eugène Schueller, who founded the business in 1909 with an early hair dye sold to Parisian salons. “Science has been, since the ignition of the company, the soul and beating heart of our group.”
To Mazodier’s point, the patterns of investment are changing, however. Last year, for the first time, the company spent more on tech than on pure R&D, driven by AI. You can see this in things like L’Oréal’s BETiq system, which optimizes resource allocation for advertising and promotions. CEO Nicolas Hieronimus recently said that BETiq had improved return on investment by 10% to 15%, and now covers over 40% of L’Oréal’s €13 billion total marketing spend.
Tech also makes its way into the lab. L’Oréal scientists were able to use its 14.5-terabyte beauty database to create digital twins for different types of curly or Afro-textured hair, allowing in silico research to test responses to different molecules, which Lavernos says can be 100 times as fast as the traditional experimental route. This discovery directly led to new, high-performing products, including Redken’s Acidic Bonding Curls, the first no-sulfate, no-silicone bonding treatment designed specifically for curly hair.
“Tech is really the game changer in my professional life. I’ve worked here 35 years, and I would never have imagined, in my engineer’s brain, the way we work, interact, and sell products to consumers today. And I have no clue what it will be 10 years from now, because a new innovation happens every week,” Lavernos says.
A long-term play
Lavernos’s decades-long career is not at all unusual at L’Oréal. Longevity of service is de rigueur at the group; Hieronimus is known internally as a “L’Oréal baby,” and is only the sixth CEO in its history. This is a company that plays the long game, something made easier by its ownership structure: L’Oréal is still majority owned by the founder’s family, the Bettencourt Meyers, and by Swiss conglomerate Nestlé, which bought a stake in 1974.
“Science has been, since the ignition of the company, the soul and beating heart of our group.”Barbara Lavernos
“Imagine my role in research or in tech. You are beginning a science that you need to cook and accelerate, but the real delivery might happen years later. So here, having this stable family ownership is fantastic,” Lavernos says. “But because we’re also on the stock exchange, we are as challenged as if we were not family-owned, so we could say sincerely it’s the best of both worlds.”
Beyond enabling tech and research investments, you can see long-termism in action in L’Oréal’s disciplined and strategic approach to M&A, with winning investments since 2014 in the likes of NYX, CeraVe, Aesop, and Dr. G.
“They’re picking companies that can add to their portfolio. So Dr. G gives them access to this booming Korean-beauty trend. But they’re taking the brand and making use of L’Oréal’s huge marketing budget, supply-chain structure, and scientific advances, which give those smaller companies access to a global stage. It’s very clever, because it doesn’t try to subsume those smaller companies into L’Oréal,” says Danni Hewson, head of financial analysis at investment platform AJ Bell.
Indeed, many consumers wouldn’t realize that brands like La RochePosay, SkinCeuticals, Maybelline, Lancôme, Kiehl’s, Pureology, and Garnier were part of the same group, because they have such distinct identities and operate at different ends of the cosmetics, skin-care, and hair-care markets.
The same applies to its lucrative licensing partnerships in fragrances with luxury brands like Prada, YSL, and Armani: win-win propositions that give the brands access to L’Oréal’s retail scale and expertise, while allowing L’Oréal to benefit from their existing brand appeal. It’s paid off: Recent deals signed with Miu Miu and Jacquemus have helped the group’s €15 billion Luxe division take overall global leadership in prestige (luxury) beauty for the first time.
(Sources: Regulatory filings; S&P Global. (Figures are 2024 full-year results.))
“Brand equity is a treasure. It’s quite easy to develop a brand quickly, but then you won’t be sure you can protect the brand equity,” Lavernos says. The idea instead is to nurture the brand over time: “Imagine a family in which you adopt your sons and daughters. You welcome them into the family.”
The Hair Evaluation Room at the L’Oreal Research & Innovation Center at the Kanagawa Science Park in Kawasaki, Japan.
Toru Hanai—Bloomberg/Getty Images
Lavernos describes a recent visit by the founders of British skin-care brand Medik8, in which L’Oréal took a majority stake in June, to L’Oréal’s labs in France: “Imagine the joy for me to observe the discussion between these two scientists and our team. They were so excited because they had access to so much equipment and science. We don’t know what we will launch together, but undoubtedly we will create new products because the capacity is there. It’s true in media investment, in finance, in all functions. But if we don’t keep their brand equity, which makes their success, we are destroying value.”
Strength in breadth
The result of this M&A approach is a well-configured, complementary, and uniquely broad portfolio that reaches every geography, category, price point, and demographic segment.
Strength in breadth protects the group from downturns in particular markets: Unlike Unilever, Procter & Gamble, and Estée Lauder, L’Oréal is exposed to both mass and prestige beauty, as well as the rapidly growing dermatological skin-care market, and professional hair care. When one does badly, the others tend to compensate, with prestige customers trading down in a pinch, for example. In China, where the market for global beauty brands has declined sharply since 2022 amid an economic slowdown and rising local competition, L’Oréal has seen a contraction, but has been relatively buoyed by its focus on prestige products there, which have been less affected than the mass market.
Yet diversification isn’t just defensive. It has also provided ample opportunities in a market where there is still a lot of growth. RBC Capital Markets analyst Fon Udomsilpa says that L’Oréal has an excellent record of spotting these opportunities and then committing resources to capitalize, both by capturing share and by growing the overall category further. “A good example is face masks, which come from Korean beauty. L’Oréal is the only listed Western company that has actually captured share from Korean companies, and in many markets it is actually the leader in that category,” Udomsilpa explains.
Barbara Lavernos, L’Oréal’s deputy CEO, in charge of Research, Innovation, and Technology.
Courtesy of L’Oréal
Geographically, breadth has allowed L’Oréal to achieve particularly impressive results in Africa and Asia (outside of China, Japan, and Korea): Like-for-like sales in these regions rose 12.3% in 2024. But growth has also been strong in its traditional markets like Europe (up 8.8%) and North America (up 5.5%).
Lavernos points not only to category expansion, like Kérastase’s new night serum for hair (“I love it, I use it every day”), but also to demographic expansion to help explain this. Boomer men, she notes, are an undertapped but rapidly growing segment.
Can this growth continue indefinitely, though?
“Being a veteran of this company, I know what it takes to stay where we are. Being a market leader is the most challenging position, by definition,” Lavernos says. “I learned during my first week here that I must adopt a sane way of worrying, a healthy concern…[So] what am I fearing for the future? Disruption that re-deals the cards of the game in a very different manner. If you see science-fiction movies you sometimes see ways to manage your beauty that are very different.”
Instant, automated, personalized beauty, à la The Jetsons, hasn’t quite arrived yet. But L’Oréal’s culture of healthy concern was evident when Hieronimus announced the group’s “beauty stimulus” plan last year. Despite another year of record sales, there have been challenges in some markets outside of China, such as U.S. mass-market makeup, where e.l.f. Beauty and others have gained market share, leading L’Oréal to an intensification of new product launches, across all categories, but particularly targeted at Gen Z and social media users.
Lavernos is vigilant but bullish. “Why should I be confident for the future? Because of the quality and the confrontational spirit we have in this company, confronting ideas, having points of view that are different,” she says. “Whenever we see a small company with a good idea on social media, or a good product, we are on fire. We are competitors. We are so unhappy with ourselves whenever someone is doing something better.”
L’Oréal, in other words, has no intention of resting on its laurels. It intends to keep changing with the changing market, so it can stay ahead.
A bystander who rushed and disarmed one of the Bondi Beach attackers has won praise from leaders around the world, including US President Donald Trump and hedge fund billionaire Bill Ackman, who announced a reward program for community heroes.
Extraordinary footage of the civilian’s actions began circulating on social media on Sunday, shortly after two men, later identified as a father and son, started shooting into a crowd gathered to celebrate the first day of Hanukkah. The massacre has left at least 16 people dead in the worst terrorist attack in Australia’s history.
In the mobile-phone video, which has not been verified by Bloomberg News, one of the attackers is standing near a tree and firing. A few meters away, a crouched man emerges from behind a parked car. He grabs the shooter from behind and wrestles the weapon from his hands. Local media named the bystander as Ahmed el Ahmed, a 43-year-old father-of-two from south Sydney. He was shot twice and is being treated in the hospital, according to reports.
He was also soon lauded for his feat. Trump said at the White House that Ahmed had saved many lives and expressed “great respect” for him. In Sydney, New South Wales Premier Chris Minns went further, describing Ahmed’s wrestle with the shooter as “the most unbelievable scene I’ve ever seen.”
“That man is a genuine hero and I’ve got no doubt there are many, many people alive tonight as a result of his bravery,” Minns said at a press conference late Sunday.
Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese also praised Ahmed, and other bystanders who helped treat victims in the immediate aftermath of the shooting.
“People rushing towards danger to show the best of the Australian character,” Albanese told reporters Monday. “That’s who we are, people who stand up for our values.”
Pershing Square Capital Management’s founder Ackman called Ahmed “a brave hero” and said his hedge fund firm would establish a reward program for people who had carried out similar acts.
The top donor to a gofundme page set up for the “hero” who tackled the shooter is listed as William Ackman, who gave $99,999. More than $170,000 has been raised so far.
Salesforce Inc. Founder and Chief Executive Officer Marc Benioff also expressed his gratitude for Ahmed in a post on X.
Next year should mark a shift in the housing market after years of largely being frozen in place, according to Mike Simonsen, chief economist at top residential real estate brokerage Compass.
Home sales flatlined amid unaffordable conditions after rising demand collided with tepid supply growth, pushing up home prices. Would-be buyers became so discouraged that demand cooled and remains slow.
Prices are now becoming more favorable for house hunters, a trend that should continue in 2026 and change the narrative in the housing market.
“In the next era, that story flips. So sales are starting to move higher, but prices are capped or maybe down. Incomes are rising faster than prices, and so affordability improves for the first time in a bunch of years,” Simonsen told CNBC on Friday. “It’s not a dramatic improvement, but it’s the start of the new era.”
His view echoes a recent report from Redfin, which also cited stronger income and weaker homes prices as it predicted a “Great Housing Reset” in 2026.
In addition to potential buyers giving up on finding an affordable home, sellers have been giving up on finding someone willing to buy at the price they want.
As a result, the number of homes that were withdrawn from the market jumped this year. In June, these so-called delistings shot up 47% from a year earlier.
Simonsen said listing withdrawals tend to be owner-occupied homes, meaning they could be latent demand as well as supply. That’s because two transactions would be needed: owners want to buy a new home but must sell their current one.
“In an environment where conditions improve a little bit, we actually estimate that that’s a representation of shadow demand—people that want to move, people that have delayed moves for maybe four years now,” he said, adding that there are about 150,000 such homeowners.
His housing market outlook for a new era of improving affordability doesn’t depend on a steep drop in mortgage rates. In fact, a plunge might spur so much demand that prices would overheat.
Simonsen expects rates to stay in the low-6% range, allowing sales to grow while also keeping home prices in check as more inventory comes on the market.
The price environment is already showing auspicious signs for prospective buyers. More than half of U.S. homes have dropped in value over the last year, but homeowners can still sell with a net gain as values are up a median 67% since their home’s last sale, accordion to data from Zillow.
And a separate report fromZillow found that homebuyers are getting record-high discounts. While the typical individual discount remains $10,000, desperate sellers are increasingly offering multiple reductions as muted demand leaves homes on the market for longer. As a result, the cumulative price cut in October hit $25,000.
“Most homeowners have seen their home values soar over the past several years, which gives them the flexibility for a price cut or two while still walking away with a profit,” Zillow Senior Economist Kara Ng said in a statement last month. “These discounts are bringing more listings in line with buyers’ budgets, and helping fuel the most active fall housing market in three years. Patient buyers are reaping the rewards as the market continues to rebalance.”
A man who carried out an attack in Syria that killed three U.S. citizens had joined Syria’s internal security forces as a base security guard two months earlier and was recently reassigned amid suspicions that he might be affiliated with the Islamic State group, a Syrian official told The Associated Press Sunday.
The attack Saturday in the Syrian desert near the historic city of Palmyra killed two U.S. service members and one American civilian and wounded three others. It also wounded three members of the Syrian security forces who clashed with the gunman, interior ministry spokesperson Nour al-Din al-Baba said.
Al-Baba said that Syria’s new authorities had faced shortages in security personnel and had to recruit rapidly after the unexpected success of a rebel offensive last year that intended to capture the northern city of Aleppo but ended up overthrowing the government of former President Bashar Assad.
“We were shocked that in 11 days we took all of Syria and that put a huge responsibility in front of us from the security and administration sides,” he said.
The attacker was among 5,000 members who recently joined a new division in the internal security forces formed in the desert region known as the Badiya, one of the places where remnants of the Islamic State extremist group have remained active.
Attacker had raised suspicions
Al-Baba said the internal security forces’ leadership had recently become suspicious that there was an infiltrator leaking information to IS and began evaluating all members in the Badiya area.
The probe raised suspicions last week about the man who later carried out the attack, but officials decided to continue monitoring him for a few days to try to determine if he was an active member of IS and to identify the network he was communicating with if so, al-Baba said. He did not name the attacker.
At the same time, as a “precautionary measure,” he said, the man was reassigned to guard equipment at the base at a location where he would be farther from the leadership and from any patrols by U.S.-led coalition forces.
On Saturday, the man stormed a meeting between U.S. and Syrian security officials who were having lunch together and opened fire after clashing with Syrian guards, al-Baba said. The attacker was shot and killed at the scene.
Al-Baba acknowledged that the incident was “a major security breach” but said that in the year since Assad’s fall “there have been many more successes than failures” by security forces.
In the wake of the shooting, he said, the Syrian army and internal security forces “launched wide-ranging sweeps of the Badiya region” and broke up a number of alleged IS cells. The interior ministry said in a statement later that five suspects were arrested in the city of Palmyra.
The U.S. has had forces on the ground in Syria for over a decade, with a stated mission of fighting IS, with about 900 troops present there today.
Before Assad’s ouster, Washington had no diplomatic relations with Damascus and the U.S. military did not work directly with the Syrian army. Its main partner at the time was the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces in the country’s northeast.
That has changed over the past year. Ties have warmed between the administrations of U.S. President Donald Trump and Syrian interim President Ahmad al-Sharaa, the former leader of an Islamist insurgent group Hayat Tahrir al-Sham that used to be listed by Washington as a terrorist organization.
In November, al-Sharaa became the first Syrian president to visit Washington since the country’s independence in 1946. During his visit, Syria announced its entry into the global coalition against the Islamic State, joining 89 other countries that have committed to combating the group.
U.S. officials have vowed retaliation against IS for the attack but have not publicly commented on the fact that the shooter was a member of the Syrian security forces.
Critics of the new Syrian authorities have pointed to Saturday’s attack as evidence that the security forces are deeply infiltrated by IS and are an unreliable partner.
Mouaz Moustafa, executive director of the Syrian Emergency Task Force, an advocacy group that seeks to build closer relations between Washington and Damascus, said that is unfair.
Despite both having Islamist roots, HTS and IS were enemies and often clashed over the past decade.
Among former members of HTS and allied groups, Moustafa, said, “It’s a fact that even those who carry the most fundamentalist of beliefs, the most conservative within the fighters, have a vehement hatred of ISIS.”
“The coalition between the United States and Syria is the most important partnership in the global fight against ISIS because only Syria has the expertise and experience to deal with this,” he said.
Later Sunday, Syria’s state-run news agency SANA reported that four members of the internal security forces were killed and a fifth was wounded after gunmen opened fire on them in the city of Maarat al-Numan in Idlib province.
It was not immediately clear who the gunmen were or whether the attack was linked to the Saturday’s shooting.