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Beauty products company Estée Lauder (NYSE:EL) met Wall Street’s revenue expectations in Q2 CY2025, but sales fell by 12% year on year to $3.41 billion. Its non-GAAP profit of $0.09 per share was in line with analysts’ consensus estimates.
Is now the time to buy EL? Find out in our full research report (it’s free).
Estée Lauder’s second quarter was marked by revenue and non-GAAP profit results that matched Wall Street expectations, but the market responded negatively due to a significant year-over-year sales decline and a sharp drop in adjusted EBITDA margin. Management attributed the performance to ongoing challenges in travel retail, which saw a 28% decline, and persistent softness in key Western markets. CEO Stéphane de la Faverie noted, “Nearly two-thirds of our organic sales decline came from travel retail,” emphasizing the impact of strategic changes and lower conversion rates. Management also acknowledged that inventory adjustments and increased consumer-facing investments weighed on profitability.
Looking ahead, Estée Lauder’s guidance reflects cautious optimism, with management targeting a return to low single-digit organic sales growth and gradual operating margin expansion. However, the company faces headwinds from incremental tariffs, subdued consumer sentiment in the U.S. and Europe, and persistent travel retail uncertainty. CFO Akhil Shrivastava stated, “While we expect margin progression, progress may take longer in some markets and is unlikely to be linear.” The company is prioritizing cost-saving initiatives, continued investment in consumer-facing activities, and a focus on emerging markets as potential growth drivers.
Management pointed to channel realignment, portfolio innovation, and cost actions as central to both the quarter’s results and the strategic roadmap for recovery.
Estée Lauder’s outlook is shaped by efforts to stabilize travel retail, expand in emerging markets, and manage cost discipline amid macroeconomic uncertainty.
In the coming quarters, our analysts will focus on (1) the pace of recovery in travel retail and China, (2) evidence that restructuring and cost actions are translating into sustained margin improvement, and (3) the ability of new product launches and channel diversification—especially online—to drive share gains in key markets. Continued progress in emerging markets and effective mitigation of tariff impacts will also be important indicators of execution.
Estée Lauder currently trades at $86.85, down from $90.01 just before the earnings. At this price, is it a buy or sell? See for yourself in our full research report (it’s free).
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Estée Lauder Stock Drops After Beauty Company Reports Steep Operating Loss
EL
The Wall Street Journal
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