
Billionaire Puig Empire to Weigh Share Buyback in Time, CEO Says
Puig shares have tumbled like those of others in the industry including L'Oreal SA and LVMH as they suffer from uncertainty over the effects of US President Donald Trump 's tariff wars and concerns about sluggish consumer demand. For Puig, the decline has come even though it has consistently met targets.
'I don't feel like we've let anyone down,' Puig said. 'We've delivered, we continue to grow.'
Most analysts have a 'buy' recommendation on the stock. 'So far everything they've promised has happened,' said Xavier Brun, Head of Equity at Trea Asset Management, which holds Puig shares.
On Wednesday, the company reiterated its forecast of 6% to 8% organic sales growth for the year, even after factoring in a 20% US tariff on Europe-made products. Trump has threatened 30% tariffs on products from the European Union. Puig said it expected little impact from the trade war in 2025 since most of the products are already in the US.
Analysts like Patrick Folan at Barclays said the company has been less forthcoming about the outlook beyond this year.
'It would be helpful for Puig to come to market and explain what the current moderation in category growth means for them, and clearly state why they could be ok compared to the wider market,' he said. 'It's important to evolve the messaging from the IPO, as the IPO expectations of market growth may no longer be realistic next year or in 2027.'
Puig plans to provide guidance for next year once he has more clarity on subjects like tariffs and the dollar.
'It'll be good to clarify these doubts to better measure consumer sentiment,' he said.
For now, the executive, who's been at the helm for more than two decades, says the company's going to stick to doing what it does best — creating and selling fragrances. It will also focus on its make-up and skincare products, whose growth stood out in the most recent quarter even as fragrance sales moderated.
That strategy of hunkering down and focusing on it core business has paid off for the company in the past. In the early 2000s, when Marc Puig took charge, the company faced financial difficulties and restructured the business to cut costs and allocate more resources toward building its perfume brands. Years later, that turnaround allowed it to stretch its fragrance portfolio.
Puig now holds three spots in the world's top ten fragrance label rankings after Jean Paul Gaultier, its fastest growing brand, entered the list last year.
Puig's focus on its prestige perfumes portfolio, which accounts about 70% of sales, and pipeline of products should sustain expansion and deliver better growth than its premium-beauty peers, Bloomberg Intelligence analysts Andrea Ferdinando Leggieri and Deborah Aitken wrote in a report on July 7.
For Puig, much of the work of concocting new perfumes happens inside the glass-walled chamber high up in its new tower in Barcelona, which was inaugurated by King Felipe VI and Queen Letizia of Spain last year.
Here, Gregorio Sola, a master perfumer, waxes lyrical about his trips around the world to find the finest ingredients: sandalwood oil from trees that have to grow for 30 to 40 years or a rare, signature rose.
Fragrances inspired by the bold smells of the 1980s and 90s are making a comeback, Sola says. The growth of the market is being fuelled by young consumers' appetite for unique and expressive fragrances. Puig tapped that market early when it started acquiring niche brands like L'Artisan Perfumeur and Byredo, which often have unconventional compositions and limited distribution.
Beginning over a century ago as a distributor of French perfumes, Puig made a major shift in the early 20th century to manufacture its own products like Spain's first homegrown lipstick. In the 60s and 70s, it began partnering with fashion designers like Paco Rabanne to launch fragrances — doubling down later by acquiring entire fashion houses like Carolina Herrera and Nina Ricci.
The challenge for Puig is to continue to deliver on its promises.
'What we need to do is take risks, tell good stories, and make exceptional products,' he said. 'I'd like to think we're able to continue getting people excited about our products.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Fashion Network
5 hours ago
- Fashion Network
Watches of Switzerland hit by Trump's new 39% Swiss import tariff
Shares of Watches of Switzerland Group Plc fell as much as 6% after U.S. President Donald Trump announced a 39% tariff on imports from Switzerland — one of the steepest rates introduced so far in the escalating trade war. The retailer, known for selling Rolex and other Swiss timepieces in the U.K. and U.S., has been hit hardest by the latest tariff measures. Financial markets in Switzerland were closed for a public holiday, initially sparing listed producers such as Richemont and Swatch Group AG from immediate share price reaction. Swiss watch exports had already surged earlier this spring, as Trump threatened a 31% levy. Importers rushed to bring in inventory ahead of potential tariffs, before volumes eased in anticipation of a possible compromise. If the 39% tariff proceeds, it could lead to U.S. retail price hikes of more than 20%, according to analysts at Jefferies led by James Grzinic. However, there remains a possibility that the measure won't be implemented. 'The one-week hiatus until implementation suggests this could be a negotiating tactic,' Grzinic said in a note. Swiss watch exports fell by nearly 10% in May, largely driven by a drop in shipments to the U.S. 'The rise of 'luxury fatigue,' a declining 'feel-good factor' from luxury purchases, and worsening consumer sentiment all contribute to a less optimistic outlook,' Vontobel analyst Jean-Philippe Bertschy wrote in a note last month.


France 24
7 hours ago
- France 24
Musk's X accuses Britain of online safety 'overreach'
The Online Safety Act's "laudable intentions are at risk of being overshadowed by the breadth of its regulatory reach," X said in a post to its Global Government Affairs account. "A plan ostensibly intended to keep children safe is at risk of seriously infringing on the public's right to free expression," it added, arguing that the impact "shows what happens when oversight becomes overreach". Beyond the law, X criticised a separate new code of conduct for online platforms as "parallel and duplicative" as well questioning the free-speech impact of a new police unit tasked with monitoring social media. The social network nevertheless last week introduced formal systems for age verification in response to the British law as well as new rules in Ireland and the wider European Union. Its options range from estimating the age of a user based on the date their account was created or their email address, to requesting a selfie whose age would be determined by artificial intelligence, or uploading an official ID document. Media regulator Ofcom says such age checks -- required since July 25 -- must be "technically accurate, robust, reliable and fair". Platforms failing to comply risk fines of up to 18 million pounds ($24 million) or 10 percent of their global revenue -- whichever is larger. Serious infringers could be blocked from British territory. The fight over age verification to access sensitive content in Britain echoes months of debate in France over new rules requiring pornography sites to verify users' ages -- a step also required by many US states. While hailed by child safety campaigners, opponents say such requirements risk compromising legitimate users' privacy -- or even exposing them to scams such as identity theft if the personal details used to verify their age were to be hacked. Many people resort to virtual private networks (VPNs) to get around territorial restrictions on access to online content. The most popular free apps on Apple's UK download store since last week have been VPNs, with one, Proton, reporting earlier this week a 1,800 percent rise in downloads, according to British media.


France 24
7 hours ago
- France 24
Brewed awakening: German beer sales lowest on record
From January to June, sales of alcoholic beer fell 6.3 percent compared to the same time last year to 3.9 billion litres, federal statistics agency Destatis said Friday. That was the lowest since figures on beer sales were first collected in 1993, it said, with demand declining both at home and abroad. Domestic sales slumped 6.1 percent year-on-year to 3.2 billion litres, similar to the size of the drop seen at the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic in 2020. Exports meanwhile tumbled 7.1 percent. Like many other industries, German beer exporters have in recent months faced tariffs in the major US market imposed by President Donald Trump. Beer consumption has fallen over recent decades in Germany as a result of an ageing population as well as changing tastes -- non-alcoholic beers have been growing in popularity, although they are not counted in the figures. Holger Eichele, head of the German Brewers' Federation, said 2025 was set to be "an extremely demanding year for us". "Geopolitical risks have greatly intensified and uncertainty is increasing for exporters," he said. He also pointed to "consumers not wanting to spend."