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The Business of Fashion Podcast

Vennette Ho on the Future of Beauty M&A

The Business of Fashion Podcast

The Business of Fashion

Fashion & Beauty, Business, Arts

4.6770 Ratings

🗓️ 19 July 2024

⏱️ 16 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

2024 has the potential to be a dynamic year for dealmaking in beauty, as brands including Makeup by Mario, Kosas, Merit and even Selena Gomez’s Rare Beauty begin exploring their strategic options. But strategic buyers and private equity firms are also adopting more selective acquisition strategies.


At The Business of Beauty Global Forum 2024, Vennette Ho, managing director and global head of beauty and personal care at investment bank Financo Raymond James shared her expert views  on this year’s M&A scene in the beauty industry. Vennette is the industry’s most respected investment banker, so when she talks, the beauty industry listens.


“M&A happens when there's a fundamental change in the consumer. The consumer needs and the consumer wants are something that the strategics today don't have,” Ho explained. “Every time there's an evolution of a consumer need or want or expectation, M&A has to become a necessity for large strategies to look at.”


This week on The BoF Podcast, Imran Amed, BoF founder and editor-in-chief sits down with Ho to discuss the evolving nature and market of the beauty industry.


Key Insights: 

  • According to Ho, consumer expectations for beauty brands have changed, as well as how they engage with them. Acquiring indie brands helps conglomerates meet those expectations. “A lot of the big companies don't have … the ability to incubate internally, they don't have the ability to come up with something. It really comes honestly from the hearts of founders and it comes from private companies. As a result, M&A becomes really necessary,” she says.


  • Ho advises founders to get to know lots of potential acquirers when considering a potential acquirer, in order to understand who shares your values before making a deal. “It also goes for the other side that they feel like they know you and you can have a better alignment from the beginning,” she adds. .


  • The perfect exit process is not just about the closing of the deal but also what happens after. “What happened six, 12 months, three years after the deal happened? Are people still feeling the same way? I think that's where we get the most pride and say, ‘Okay, this actually impacted the industry in some huge way that went beyond just that moment of the deal,’” says Ho. 


  • Looking towards the future of the industry, Ho believes we’ll continue to see the breakdown of beauty category silos. “I think some of the most interesting and most disruptive companies don't actually fit into that mould and don't actually fit into a traditional thing,” she said. “The consumer doesn't think, ‘Is this a prestige brand? Is this a mass brand? Is this a skincare brand?’. They're thinking, ‘Is this a brand that I want to engage with that engages me in a certain way?’ There's a really exciting democratisation of things where brands can exist in different channels at the same time.”



Additional Resources:




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Transcript

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0:00.0

Hi, this is Imran Ahmed, founder and CEO of the Business of Fashion.

0:08.1

Welcome to the Bof podcast.

0:10.8

It's Friday, July 19th.

0:13.2

2024 is set to be a dynamic year for deal-making in beauty, as brands including makeup by

0:19.0

Mario, Kosas, Merritt, and even Selena Gomez's rare beauty

0:24.0

begin to explore their strategic options. But strategic buyers and private equity firms are also

0:29.7

adopting more selective acquisition strategies. I had the pleasure of sharing the stage with

0:34.8

Venet Ho, managing director and global head of beauty and personal

0:38.6

care at Financo Raymond James at the Business of Beauty Global Forum 2024, where she shared her

0:45.5

thoughts on the beauty M&A scene. Now, Vinette is the industry's most respected investment banker,

0:51.8

so when she talks, the beauty industry listens.

0:56.1

The consumer doesn't think, is this a prestige brand? This is a mass brand? It's this a skincare

1:01.0

brand. They're thinking, is this a brand that I want to engage with that engages me in a certain

1:04.9

way? And I think there's a certain really exciting democratization of things where a brand can exist in different

1:13.4

channels at the same time. This week on the BOF podcast, Vanette shares the latest news and her views

1:20.0

on the evolving nature of MNA in the beauty space. Here's Vanette Ho on the Bof podcast.

1:28.9

Welcome, Vinette.

1:30.1

Thank you. Thank you, perhaps.

1:31.2

We had the pleasure of sitting together last night at dinner.

1:34.4

And it's just really been fascinating for me to see the dynamism in the M&A market in the beauty industry.

1:42.6

I was thinking back to the last 12 months, you had these

1:47.2

like massive mega deals carrying acquired Creed for like $3.8 billion. Aesop was acquired by

...

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