GROUPshelf opens
Industry TrendsBrand Founders6 min read28 May 2026

Estee Lauder Is Shedding Three Brands. The Shelf Space Behind Them Is Yours to Win.

Final bids are in for Too Faced, Smashbox and Dr. Jart+. The headline is portfolio rationalisation. The actual story for independent founders is twelve months of unusually warm retail buyer rooms and PE acquirers refocused on the brands the majors are no longer building.

SL
Sophie Lansbury

Beauty 2.0 Founder - 20 years in the beauty industry

The most valuable thing a major shedding brands creates is not the brands themselves. It is the space and the capital that go looking for what comes next.

Key takeaway

In brief
Estee Lauder has received final bids for Too Faced and Smashbox as a package and Dr. Jart+ separately, totalling a combined low nine-figure valuation. The disposal sits alongside merger talks with Puig and a wider portfolio reset. For independent beauty founders, the operational consequence is two-fold. Retail buyers will need replacements in colour cosmetics and clinical K-beauty within the next two range reviews, and PE acquirers who lose out on the legacy assets will redirect capital toward growing independents in the same categories. The window to be in those conversations is roughly twelve months.
Who this is for
Brand Founders
Main takeaway
The most valuable thing a major shedding brands creates is not the brands themselves. It is the space and the capital that go looking for what comes next.
What to do next
Write a one-page positioning brief framing your brand as the natural replacement for whichever shed brand sits closest to your category. Send it to your retail buyer contacts and the PE firms tracking your space.

The headlines this week were about the buyers. Who would end up with Too Faced. Whether Dr. Jart+ would stay intact. What Puig was prepared to commit if the merger talks moved forward.

The headlines for founders should have been about the consequences. When a major group sheds three brands at once in colour cosmetics and clinical K-beauty, two things happen on a predictable timeline. The shelves those brands were sitting on need to be refilled. And the capital that did not win the bid does not go back to its limited partners. It goes looking for something else in the same neighbourhood.

Both of those movements have the same window. Roughly twelve months. The brands that are in the room during that window do disproportionately well. The brands that are not in the room read about the deals in their inbox six months later.

Coverage of the bid process is across Personal Care Insights and eMarketer. Both sources confirm the same structural read. This is not distress. This is a portfolio reset by a group that has decided where it wants to compete and where it does not.

What the shelf actually does when a brand exits

A retail buyer does not leave a planogram half empty. Range reviews work on velocity per linear foot, and a gap in colour cosmetics or clinical K-beauty is a gap in the buyer's number for the quarter. When a brand exits or is moved into a holding pattern during a sale process, the buyer's immediate priority is to find a credible like-for-like replacement.

Like-for-like does not mean identical product. It means similar customer, similar price band, similar shelf presence. For Too Faced and Smashbox, the replacement profile is colour cosmetics with strong creative point of view, prestige pricing, and clear sell-through data. For Dr. Jart+, the replacement profile is clinical-feeling K-beauty skincare with an ingredient story and an existing department store proof point.

If your brand sits within those parameters and you are not already in conversation with the buyer team, the next four months are the right moment. Buyers in this position are not running a process. They are looking for warm intros from brands that can show velocity and a credible scale story.

What the unspent PE capital actually does

The auction process for these three brands had multiple credible bidders. The losing bidders do not write off the diligence work they did. They redirect it.

If you watch the indie beauty M&A flow in the twelve months after a major group disposal, the pattern is consistent. PE firms that lost on the legacy brand convert their thesis into a smaller acquisition or a growth investment in a brand that matches the same category and customer. The valuation multiples on those deals tend to be more favourable than they would have been before the loss, because the firm has internal pressure to deploy the capital it earmarked.

The practical implication for a founder at £2m to £5m revenue is that the firms tracking your category are likely to call you with more urgency in the next two quarters than they have in the prior two years. Whether you want to take a call is a separate question. The calls will come. Knowing why they are coming changes how you take them.

The clinical K-beauty signal

The Dr. Jart+ separation is its own data point. The fact that the brand is being sold as a stand-alone asset rather than packaged with the other two tells you something about how the bidders value clinical K-beauty positioning right now.

Two reads are possible. The first is that bidders prize the clarity of a single-category asset and are willing to pay a higher multiple to acquire one cleanly. The second is that the K-beauty acquisition trend, reinforced by Estee Lauder's full acquisition of Forest Essentials earlier this year, is now a defined investment thesis with dedicated capital behind it.

Both reads point in the same direction for an indie K-beauty brand or a Western brand with clinical positioning. The acquirer pool is active and the comparable transactions are happening at valuations that should change how you think about your own exit timing.

What to do in the next 90 days

Treat this as a window, not as news. The actions that matter sit on three tracks.

The first track is positioning. Write a one-page document that frames your brand as the natural replacement for whichever shed brand sits closest to your category. Not a pitch deck. A brief that a retail buyer could forward to a planogram analyst without rewriting. Include your sell-through data, your social proof, and your range strategy. The buyers who matter will not have time to translate a marketing deck into a commercial argument.

The second track is the PE conversation. If you have not had a recent introductory call with the firms active in your category, the next 60 days is the right time to take one. You are not signalling that you want to sell. You are signalling that you are aware of the market and want a relationship in place when the market moves. The firms that matter will respect that framing.

The third track is your retail relationship hygiene. If you are stocked anywhere that lost a brand in this disposal or is likely to, your buyer is busier and more receptive than usual. Send the sell-through update you have been delaying. Confirm next quarter's promotional plan. Ask whether the planogram review timing has shifted. The brands that win the freed shelf space are the ones who were already in regular contact, not the ones who arrived after the news.

The slower thing this story is also telling you

The disposal also confirms a slower pattern that has been visible for two years. The majors are no longer building broad portfolios. They are concentrating around the assets that pull the most weight and shedding the ones that do not. Coty has signalled the same direction. LVMH did it with Fenty. The structural conclusion is that the indie space has more room than it did, and the route to scale through acquisition by a major is becoming narrower and more concentrated.

For most founders at the £500k to £5m revenue stage, that is not a problem. It is a clarification. The brands that win the next decade will be the ones who built durable independent businesses that did not need to be acquired to succeed. Some of them will still get acquired. Most will not. Both outcomes are fine if the business underneath is healthy.

The current window is not the only window. It is the one that is open right now.

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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

When a major sheds a brand, the shelf does not stay empty and the PE money does not go home. Both come looking for what is next.

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