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3 Reasons to Buy Estée Lauder Stock Like There’s No Tomorrow

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Since hitting an all-time high in 2022, Estée Lauder‘s (NYSE: EL) stock has basically been crushed. The shares have lost roughly 80% of their value in two years. On top of that, the company just announced a dividend cut of about 47%.

There’s no doubt that the news is bad today, but for a contrarian investor, this could be the time to start sniffing around at this perfume and makeup giant. Here are three reasons why.

Estée Lauder doesn’t make products that consumers need, like a consumer staples maker. It makes products that people want, which is why it is a consumer discretionary stock. Further, the products that Estée Lauder makes are expensive for their niche. But there’s a nuance here, because the products it makes are affordable relative to other luxury items. This is an important point of differentiation.

Image source: Getty Images.

Good markets or bad ones, few people buy a BMW on a whim. But that fragrance you and your partner both love is something that might be worth dropping a hundred dollars on for a small bottle if you run out.

With brands across skin care, hair care, makeup, and fragrance, Estée Lauder has a broad and globally diversified portfolio. And with sales of nearly $3.4 billion in the fiscal first quarter of 2025, the company is substantial, noting that this top-line result has been achieved despite some ongoing headwinds in key Asian markets.

Ultimately, the massive stock price decline is highlighting some material near-term risks that the company is facing today. But Estée Lauder is addressing its problems from a position of strength, given the underlying fundamentals of its affordable luxury niche.

The big problems facing Estée Lauder today include weak sales in China thanks to its slow recovery from pandemic shutdowns, slow sales in the travel retail channel (which are also related to Asian weakness), and the costs associated with litigation around talcum powder.

Fiscal first-quarter 2025 organic sales were down 5% year over year. The bottom line of the income statement fell into the red, with a loss of $0.43 per share. That’s down from a profit of $0.09 per share in the prior year. But here’s the interesting thing: Pull out some one-time items, and earnings rise to $0.12 per share, up from $0.11 in the fiscal first quarter of 2024.

The big one-time items impacting the first quarter of fiscal 2025 were talc settlement charges and restructuring costs. In the middle of this restructuring, the company is bringing in a new CEO. It looks like management is attempting to get as much bad news out as it can as quickly as it can, which is often called a kitchen-sink quarter (sometimes kitchen-sink periods can be longer than just a quarter).



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