L'Oreal Eyes Stake In €3 Billion Perfume Brand Amouage
L’Oreal SA is considering a potential investment in Omani luxury fragrance company Amouage, according to people familiar with the matter.
(Bloomberg) -- L’Oreal SA is considering a potential investment in Omani luxury fragrance company Amouage, according to people familiar with the matter.
The French beauty group has been holding talks on the possible purchase of a minority stake in Amouage, the people said, asking not to be identified because the information is private. Amouage’s owner, the SABCO Group conglomerate, has discussed a valuation of more than €3 billion ($3.2 billion) for the business in any deal, according to the people.
Amouage was founded in 1983 with a pitch drawing on the sultanate of Oman’s heritage as a cultural crossroads at the center of ancient trading routes for incense and myrrh. Some of its perfumes fetch €365 for a 100-milliliter bottle, according to Amouage’s website. The company sells its products, marketed as “the Gift of Kings,” in about a dozen standalone boutiques and 1,000 other locations including department stores, perfume shops and airports.
Retail sales at Amouage increased to more than $210 million in 2023, more than doubling over a three-year period. The company is controlled by SABCO, a local business group led by Chairman Sayyid Khalid Bin Hamed Al Busaidi that also has interests in real estate, media, automotive distribution and electrical equipment.
L’Oreal has pursued a string of acquisitions and licensing deals that have helped it build a stable of cosmetics and perfume brands. The company last year bought Australian cosmetics brand Aesop for an enterprise value of $2.5 billion.
There’s no certainty the deliberations will lead to a transaction and details of the potential deal could change, the people said. Amouage could also attract interest from other investors. A representative for L’Oreal declined to comment. A spokesperson for SABCO couldn’t immediately comment, while calls to Amouage weren’t answered.
Read more: L’Oreal Heir Becomes First Woman With $100 Billion Fortune
L’Oreal shares touched fresh record highs in February, with investors betting that the company’s diverse product range and geographic reach would help it weather a slowing economy. The stock has since slumped, though, after L’Oreal reported disappointing fourth-quarter sales because of a slowdown in sales to Chinese travelers.
The stock fell to € at Thursday in Paris, valuing the company at €.
Read more: Terry Smith Dumps Estée Lauder in Favor of Archrival L’Oréal
--With assistance from Angelina Rascouet, Zainab Fattah and Beth Mellor.
(Updates to add stock performance, earnings in seventh paragraph.)
More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com
©2024 Bloomberg L.P.