Global Cosmetics News – Weekly Review | Week 17, April 2026

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This week, the global cosmetics and personal care industry highlighted the growing convergence of marketing accountability, financial performance and corporate restructuring, as global brands advanced campaigns, reported earnings and responded to regulatory and market developments.

Marketing, brand partnerships and regulatory oversight featured prominently. The ASA partially upheld a ruling against La Roche-Posay over claim verification. Lancôme appointed Zoe Saldaña as global brand ambassador. Revlon named Teyana Taylor as the face of its Super Lustrous franchise, while NYX Professional Makeup partnered with Megan Thee Stallion to launch a body care campaign. Sephora announced plans to introduce safeguards on marketing anti-ageing skincare products to children.

Retail activation and brand expansion continued across key markets. Luna launched a Tokyo pop-up to strengthen its presence in Japan. Rituals expanded its footprint in Spain with new stores in Almería and Lanzarote. Target expanded its Bullseye Builds programme with a US$1 million community investment.

Financial performance updates reflected mixed conditions across global markets. L’Oréal reported strong Q1 growth, outperforming the global beauty market, while Beiersdorf reported mixed Q1 results with Derma growth offsetting weaker NIVEA performance. Proya reported an earnings decline as core brand sales slowed. THG reported its strongest quarterly growth since 2021, driven by beauty and nutrition. Mecca reported record revenue of US$1.43 billion following investment in flagship stores.

Corporate strategy and restructuring activity remained active. Estée Lauder engaged JP Morgan to finance a potential €5 billion acquisition of Puig. The owners of Boots explored a strategy overhaul ahead of a potential 2027 IPO. AB Foods confirmed plans to spin off Primark. Kimberly-Clark outlined its leadership structure ahead of integration with Kenvue. Shiseido announced plans to absorb a branding subsidiary as part of a streamlining initiative

Legal and regulatory developments continued across markets. Shein and Temu faced class-action lawsuits related to tariff-driven price increases. Nigeria’s US$1.1 billion cosmetics import bill prompted renewed focus on local production and value addition.

Investment and innovation activity also featured. L’Oréal’s BOLD fund invested in body care brand Hanni. Unilever expanded into entertainment with a Vaseline reality series titled “The Afterglow.” Hims shares rose following US regulatory moves to ease peptide access.

Leadership changes and financial restructuring were also noted. Evonik appointed a new Chief Financial Officer and extended its CEO’s contract. QVC prepared to file for Chapter 11 as it restructures US$5 billion in debt.

Taken together, this week reflected continued activity across marketing accountability, earnings performance and corporate restructuring, alongside investment and regulatory developments shaping the global cosmetics and personal care landscape.

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