L'Oreal ready to buy Nestle stake in cosmetics leader

Reuters  |  PARIS 

By and Dominique Vidalon

PARIS (Reuters) - signalled its readiness to buy Nestle's 23 percent stake in the world's biggest cosmetics firm on Friday, which along with strong results lifted the French company's shares.

said it could finance a purchase of the holding, which is now worth around 22.3 billion euros ($27.4 billion), with cash, by selling its stake in French group or through borrowing.

"If one day wants to sell, we are ready," said after released fourth-quarter earnings.

Billionaire Liliane Bettencourt's death in September has focused attention on how L'Oreal's founding family and its major shareholder Swiss group would manage their stakes.

Investor Daniel Loeb, founder of hedge fund Third Point, has pushed for to sell its stake among his demands for the Swiss firm to speed a strategy overhaul.

"We have 1.8 billion euros in cash, we have the stake.

We are also a very serious and loyal and active shareholder in Sanofi, but in case we will be ready and I'm sure if it was not enough, we have many love letters from banks that have said that they would love to lend us some money." he added.

and declined to comment.

STATUS QUO

Shares in L'Oreal, whose include Helen Mirren, and Blake Lively, were up 2.4 percent at 1109 GMT, among the top gainers on France's blue-chip CAC-40 index. shares were up 1.1 percent, while was 0.7 percent lower.

"Scarcely a surprise, but this may excite some: an acquisition of the stake by L'Oreal, part-funded by a sale of its own stake would be circa 10 percent accretive," analysts said in a note.

At today's stock price, L'Oreal's 9 percent stake in is worth more than 7 billion euros, according to data.

entered the business in 1973 with the purchase of This was later merged with Elf Aquitaine's drugs business in the late 1990s, with retaining a stake in the enlarged group.

"We see this as no change to the status quo from a perspective. Nor do we expect an imminent about-turn from Nestle, which reiterated its commitment to the holding in September," analysts wrote.

L'Oreal's Agon said on Thursday he was confident of significant growth in like-for-like sales in 2018.

($1 = 0.8152 euros)

(Reporting by Dominique Vidalon, Sarah White, Martinne Geller and Matthias Blamont; Editing by and Alexander Smith)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, February 09 2018. 16:56 IST