Published: 17:32, February 6, 2020 | Updated: 08:14, June 6, 2023
At Hermès, a US$67 lipstick could hint at big ambitions
By Bloomberg

In this March 31, 2016 photo, the logo of Hermes is pictured in the Hermes workshop on the eve of the inauguration day, in Hericourt, eastern France. (SEBASTIEN BOZON / AFP)

Hermes International unveiled its first products from a new beauty division, adding US$67 lipsticks to a brand better known for US$9,000-plus Birkin bags and US$400 silk scarves.

Hermes is hoping adding makeup and skincare will eventually boost its perfume unit, which currently makes up just 5% of the brand’s roughly 6 billion euros in annual sales

By expanding its offer in cosmetics, Hermes is testing the waters of a category that has long driven sales and profit for rivals like LVMH’s Christian Dior and Chanel. Hermes, which says it’s committed to developing beauty products in-house as much as possible, plans to add new categories of makeup every six months.

For now, the lipsticks -- whose brushed metal cases recall the hardware on Hermes bags -- will be sold only in the brand’s retail stores. Snubbing beauty retailers such as LVMH’s Sephora will limit growth, but allow the company to maintain strict control on pricing and distribution while the division gets on its feet.

ALSO READ: Jean Paul Gaultier bids farewell to the catwalk

An Hermes bag is pictured in the Hermes workshop on the eve of the inauguration day, in in Hericourt, eastern France, on March 31, 2016. (SEBASTIEN BOZON / AFP)

“They’re doing this very cautiously so it has no risk to dilute the brand,” said Mario Ortelli, a London-based luxury consultant.

As a latecomer in the luxury cosmetics arena, Hermes has plenty of catching up to do. Chanel’s beauty range, which founder Coco Chanel launched in 1924, racks up an estimated 4 billion euros (US$4.4 billion) in annual sales. That compares with just 312 million euros at Hermes, whose beauty counters have been limited to perfumes and soap.

After the soft launch, Hermes is hoping adding makeup and skincare will eventually boost its perfume unit, which currently makes up just 5% of the brand’s roughly 6 billion euros in annual sales. The permanent collection of the new lipstick will offer two-dozen shades, and cases can be recharged.

‘Three-dimensional’

“It’s very important for a house of perfumes to be three-dimensional,” Chief Executive Officer Axel Dumas told investors last year when first announcing the project. Makeup, skincare, and perfume drive sales in different regions of the world, so “you need to have all three.”

The color cosmetics market is expected to grow more than 6%, to US$77.5 billion this year, according to data from Euromonitor.

In this June 20, 2018 photo, a craftsman explain the manufacturing of a Hermes Carre scarf to visitors, at the Palais de la Bourse, in Lyon, during the "Hermes Hors les Murs" (Hermes Outside the Walls) event, where French fashion luxury goods manufacturer Hermes introduce its artisans to the public. (JEFF PACHOUD / AFP)

While Hermes has been careful to limit expectations for the new products’ immediate impact on sales, it has remained coy about makeup’s long-term prospects. A June report simply said the division “has some nice surprises in store.”

READ MORE: Time is money: US$14-m Patek Philippe up for sale soon in HK

Hermes shares rose 0.6% early Thursday in Paris.

“In five years, will this have a material impact like for Chanel or Dior? No. In 50 years, maybe,” Ortelli said. “When the Hermes family launches a new product line they certainly have the very long-term view in mind.”