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    L’Oréal and other beauty giants are pleading with the EU to exclude American cosmetics from its tariff war


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    A group of beauty companies, including industry leader L’Oréal, hope the European Union will exclude American cosmetic goods when it rolls out extensive tariffs next month.

    L’Oréal, the Paris-based company that owns brands like Lancome, Maybelline, and Cera Ve, has a large presence in the U.S.—the North American region plowed in €11.8 billion in sales last year. 

    However, new tariffs could hamper beauty-related trade significantly as the region has a significant upper hand. In France alone, beauty imports from the U.S. amount to $500 million, while exports are worth roughly €2.5 billion, according to an industry number cited by Reuters.

    “If there is this tit-for-tat thing on beauty, it’s going to penalize Europe much more than American businesses and companies,” L’Oréal CEO Nicolas Hieronimus told the Financial Times. He added that he urged the officials he met in Brussels last week to look at the balance of trade before subjecting entire categories to the upcoming tariff. 

    L’Oréal’s Hieronimus was joined by 15 other beauty executives who warned the EU that its tariff countermeasures could hurt their operations. 

    “My only ask to the people I’ve met [in Brussels] is to say: look at the balance of trade and don’t put a red flag on a category where we have more to lose than to win,” he said. 

    When U.S. President Donald Trump said he would impose a 25% tariff on steel and aluminum, the EU published a 99-page list of retaliatory tariffs on U.S. goods earlier in March. This includes shampoos, perfumes, aftershaves, sunscreens, and more. 

    Beauty and personal care products contribute €180 billion to the bloc’s GDP and employ 2 million people, according to Oxford Economics. Germany and France are the region’s biggest cosmetics markets—and are home to Beiersdorf and L’Oréal, respectively.

    Beauty comes at a cost

    Two-thirds of Hamburg-based Beiersdorf’s American business comes from beauty products made outside the U.S., primarily in Mexico. The company is navigating through what tariffs could mean while continuing to serve the burgeoning U.S. market, including increasing inventories and hiking prices.

    The U.S. market has been especially attractive for beauty companies amid a luxury slowdown. The country has emerged as a bright spot as consumer spending has picked up.

    Europe is a heavyweight in cosmetics in its own right. Still, small and medium-sized U.S. companies benefit from exporting to the region due to low import tariffs on personal care goods. 

    Any level of tariffs under the Trump administration was bound to stress the beauty industry’s global supply chain. Establishing production from scratch for some of the more specialized raw materials used in making cosmetics can be tricky—and expensive. 

    When it was just a case of U.S. imposing tariffs, L’Oréal’s Hieronimus wasn’t too concerned as many of its beauty products are made within the country. 

    It does, however, export its fragrances from Europe.

    Beiersdorf’s CEO Vincent Warnery said that if the EU didn’t ease how its tariffs applied to American cosmetics, it would be akin to “shooting ourselves in the foot,” he told the FT.

    “We’ll raise prices in the U.S., if needed, which will hurt consumers in the US and Canada and will also hurt our market share . . . So leave us out of it, enjoy what we bring to the economy, and don’t start a fire where there is no need,” he added.

    The tariffs will take effect on April 13, but the EU is still soliciting views from businesses impacted by the measures. 

    Representatives at L’Oréal, Beiersdorf, and the EU didn’t immediately return Fortune’s requests for comment.

    This story was originally featured on Fortune.com

    https://fortune.com/img-assets/wp-content/uploads/2025/03/GettyImages-1913161467-e1742820989715.jpg?resize=1200,600 https://fortune.com/europe/2025/03/24/loreal-beiersdorf-beauty-eu-cosmetics-tariff-war/
    Prarthana Prakash

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