Tuesday, December 14, 2021

Tata puts 'key focus' on beauty business as startups blaze the trail

 India's cosmetics and beauty market is estimated to nearly double by 2025 from $11 billion in 2017, aided in good measure by online retailers.


Indian conglomerate Tata Group plans to reclaim ground in the beauty business it exited 23 years ago, with the local market for cosmetics forecast to be worth $20 billion by 2025.

Beauty products will be “a key focus for us” from now on along with footwear and underwear, Noel Tata, non-executive chairman of Trent Ltd., a Tata Group unit operating a chain of retail stores, said in an interview at his office in Mumbai. “Extended product line and experimentation with formats for these products are in the offing as we see these as growth areas in retail.”

India’s cosmetics and beauty market is estimated to nearly double by 2025 from $11 billion in 2017, according to data from Statista, aided in good measure by online retailers led by Mumbai-based Nykaa that saw a blistering growth during the pandemic. The startup, that’s now a $13 billion company after a blockbuster IPO, helped millennial and Gen-Z consumers buy high-end beauty brands as well as access tutorials and testimonials from social media influencers.

That’s a far cry from the beauty sector India’s largest business house dominated decades ago. Simone Tata, Noel Tata’s mother, helped create Lakme--the French name for the Indian goddess of wealth, Lakshmi--in 1953 as the country’s first cosmetics company. The group sold it to Unilever Plc’s local unit in 1998. While the coffee-to-cars conglomerate re-entered the turf in 2014, long after the 10-year non-compete clause had expired, it’s only now that the group has begun raising its game again.

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