Business / Companies

L'Oreal's Garnier loses beauty contest

By Shi Jing in Shanghai (China Daily) Updated: 2014-01-09 09:19

L'Oreal's Garnier loses beauty contest

A L'Oreal counter is seen at a shopping mall in Xuchang, Henan province, Jan 4, 2014. The France-based cosmetics giant has announced that it will halt the operation of its beauty product brand Garnier in China, one week after United States-based counterpart Revlon Inc announced its exit from the Chinese market. [Photo by Geng Guoqing / Asianewsphoto]

France-based cosmetics giant L'Oreal SA has announced that it will halt the operation of its beauty product brand Garnier in China, one week after United States-based counterpart Revlon Inc announced its exit from the Chinese market.

In an e-mail to China Daily on Wednesday, L'Oreal said it had made the "proactive" decision of discontinuing the sales of Garnier products in China so that the group's consumer products division can grow at a "faster and more sustainable" pace.

The company will concentrate on its two leading brands: beauty brand L'Oreal Paris and makeup brand Maybelline New York.

The transition is intended to prepare for L'Oreal's future and strengthen its leading position after 17 years in the Chinese beauty market, said the e-mail.L'Oreal's Garnier loses beauty contest

The group's fiscal reports show that sales of L'Oreal China totaled 12.05 billion yuan ($1.99 billion) in 2012, up 12.4 percent year-on-year.

According to market research firm Euromonitor International, L'Oreal China held first place in skin care in 2013, with double-digit value growth from 2012 across the company.

"Brand Garnier was targeted at the mass skin care market in China. As this company had a series of brands, including both mass and premium in China, Garnier was not its flagship brand", said Vera Wang, senior research analyst at Euromonitor.

Although Garnier had its day in the sun, but its revenue did not grow fast enough to be sustainable, said Michael Deng, who focuses on fast moving consumer goods at Roland Berger Strategy Consultants.

Deng said the reasons for Garnier's decline are complicated. First, it failed to build an image as an expert in herbal beauty products among Chinese consumers. Second, L'Oreal's Garnier brand didn’t have enough experience in dealing with modern trade such as hypermarkets and supermarkets when transforming from traditional department store counters, its previous major distribution channel in China. Third, Garnier had a slow and long supply chain, with only two large and upscale regional distribution centers in Suzhou and Shanghai, so getting its products into lower-tier cities was difficult.

"Garnier's retreat from the Chinese market will definitely affect L'Oreal's mapping in China. The group is now dedicated to further reaching third- and fourth-tier cities. As Garnier is the one and only low-end brand under L'Oreal, the absence of this brand will definitely mean more difficulty for the group's new strategy," he said.

Deng suggests that the "next decade" may be primetime for Chinese FMCG brands in general, as overseas brands are facing the loss of preferential government policies and struggle to advance their understanding of consumers in lower tier cities, make quick decisions, and maintain competitiveness.

Market research firm Nielsen's China Consumer Landscape Shifts report, released in May last year, showed that local brands are becoming more active than multinational brands in several FMCG categories, such as functional drinks, toners, skin moisturizers, packaged water and toothpaste.

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