StrategyBrand Founders6 min read6 May 2026

L'Oreal completes the Kering deal: what it means for indie beauty exits

L'Oreal closed its $4.6 billion acquisition of Kering Beaute on 31 March. Coty loses Gucci in 2028. Estee Lauder and Puig are reportedly in $40 billion merger talks. The exit window for indie beauty brands has not closed - but the bar has moved. Here is what changed and what founders should be optimising for now.

SL
Sophie Lansbury

Beauty 2.0 Founder - 20 years in the beauty industry

If your exit story is built on brand love alone, it does not clear the new bar. If your story is built on durable unit economics in an underserved niche, you may actually be better positioned because conglomerate competition in your category is reduced for a while.

Key takeaway

In brief
Three M&A signals from April 2026 - L'Oreal closing Kering Beaute, the rumoured Estee Lauder-Puig merger, Coty's strategic review - and what they collectively mean for indie founders thinking about an exit in the next three years.
Who this is for
Brand Founders
Main takeaway
If your exit story is built on brand love alone, it does not clear the new bar. If your story is built on durable unit economics in an underserved niche, you may actually be better positioned because conglomerate competition in your category is reduced for a while.
What to do next
Speak to Beauty 2.0 about an Operating Leverage review or take the Launch Readiness Audit if you are pre-launch.

L'Oreal completed its acquisition of Kering Beaute on 31 March 2026 for approximately $4.6 billion. It is L'Oreal's largest deal ever. The portfolio gives the group control of the House of Creed, a fifty-year exclusive licence for Bottega Veneta and Balenciaga beauty and fragrance, and Gucci fragrance rights from 2028. (Source: loreal.com, businessoffashion.com)

The deal does not affect indie beauty operations directly. It does change the strategic landscape every founder thinking about an exit needs to read. Three signals from April 2026 tell the story.

Signal one. L'Oreal closing Kering Beaute is the largest beauty M&A deal in years and structurally locks the designer fragrance category. (Source: hypebeast.com)

Signal two. Coty loses the Gucci licence in 2028 - worth approximately $1.1 billion annually, around ten per cent of Coty's revenue. Coty's new chief executive Markus Strobel is running an active strategic review of mass colour cosmetics and the Brazil business, assessing divestitures, spin-offs, and partnerships. The review is happening right now, this quarter. (Source: beautyindependent.com)

Signal three. Estee Lauder and Puig confirmed early-stage merger discussions in April 2026 for a deal that would combine roughly $40 billion in revenue. The combined entity would hold Charlotte Tilbury, Clinique, La Mer, Rabanne, and Puig's fragrance portfolio - a third mega-group sitting alongside L'Oreal and Coty. The deal is not certain, but the conversation is real. (Source: cosmeticsbusiness.com)

Read together, these three signals point to a beauty M&A market where mega-deals are absorbing capital and attention while the mid-tier exit window - the $50m to $300m range that funded most of the indie beauty exits between 2019 and 2023 - is compressing.

The bar for an indie exit has moved

Beauty Independent's analysis of the Kering deal, published at the end of April, is explicit on this point. Future deals will require demonstrable profitability, proven repeatability beyond a hero product, and operational discipline. Brand love alone does not clear the new bar.

I have spoken to four indie founders in the last fortnight who started the year planning a 2026 process and are now looking at 2027 or later. The reasons are consistent. Acquirers are not paying for revenue growth that is not profitable. They are not paying for hero SKU brands without a credible second act. They are not paying for the cost of integrating a brand whose operations are spreadsheets and goodwill.

The dynamics are different at the very top end. Mega-deals continue. L'Oreal closed Kering. Estee Lauder may close Puig. The deal table is busy. But the deals that close are at scale. Or they are distressed-asset buys at a steep discount.

For brands in the £5m to £80m revenue range, the market is meaningfully harder than it was eighteen months ago.

What this means for founders right now

Three things, in priority order.

One. Your exit story is not your origin story. Acquirers in 2026 are not buying your founder narrative. They are buying durable unit economics, retention beyond the hero, an operations layer that does not require the founder to keep working there for three years post-acquisition, and a credible reason the brand grows under their ownership. If your investor pack still leads with brand love and total addressable market, you are pitching to the 2021 deal market.

Two. Your hero SKU concentration is now a risk, not a feature. A brand where seventy per cent of revenue comes from one product is harder to value because the acquirer cannot underwrite the second product. The fix is not "launch more SKUs." The fix is to demonstrate that the customer who came in for the hero stays for the second and third purchase. Cohort retention by SKU is the metric. Most brands have it but do not surface it.

Three. Operations is part of the deal value. Brands that walk into a process with their MoCRA file in order, their EU CPNP notifications current, their retail door sell-through quantified, their creator LTV defensible, and their CRM flows mapped are valued differently than brands without. The reason is integration cost. An acquirer that needs to spend its first year cleaning up your operations is paying for the cleanup somewhere - usually in the multiple. Brands with their operations layer locked sell for more, not because the operations themselves are worth more, but because the acquirer can integrate faster.

The opportunity hidden in the news

There is a second-order effect founders are missing. L'Oreal locking up the designer fragrance licences for fifty years creates genuine open territory for independent artisanal fragrance brands. The conglomerate is no longer hunting the same shoppers in that category. Niche fragrance brands targeting consumers who specifically want non-conglomerate provenance now have less category competition from the big groups.

Same logic applies in other categories where conglomerate consolidation is digesting itself. If a category has just been absorbed by a mega-deal, the conglomerate is not buying smaller brands in that category for at least eighteen to twenty-four months. They are integrating. That is white space.

The brands best positioned to use this window are those with cult followings in underserved niches: wellness-adjacent skincare, biotech-led actives, diverse hair and skin types, fragrance with provenance, conscious-consumer positioning that holds up to scrutiny. The category does not matter. The fundamentals do.

What to actually do

If you are running an indie beauty brand and an exit is on the three-year horizon, this is the work for the next two quarters.

Pull cohort retention by acquisition channel and by SKU. Pull contribution margin per SKU. Pull customer service ticket volumes and themes. Pull every retailer due diligence pack you can find from across Sephora, Ulta, Cult Beauty, and Space NK and assemble your own version. Pull your MoCRA, CPNP, and SCPN files. Document them.

If those documents do not exist or are spreadsheets, build them. The integration cost question that acquirers will ask in 2026 has shifted from "can we integrate?" to "how fast can we integrate?" Brands that answer "in six months, here is the file" sell at higher multiples than brands that answer "we'll figure it out."

The exit window has not closed. The bar has moved.

If you want a structured view of where your operations stand against acquirer expectations, speak to Beauty 2.0 about an Operating Leverage review. We do not write your investor pack. We make sure the operations layer underneath survives due diligence.

This post is not financial advice. For specific exit planning guidance, speak to a beauty M&A advisor.

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SL

Sophie Lansbury

Founder of Beauty 2.0. Nearly 20 years in beauty — from counter to boardroom, indie launches to global houses. Writes about the operational reality of growing beauty brands.

About Sophie

The era of cool branding being enough is over. Acquirers are now applying a higher bar: profitability proof, demonstrated retention beyond the hero SKU, and operational discipline.

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