Burberry licenses beauty business to Coty in new drive to expand

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[April 03, 2017]  By Paul Sandle

LONDON (Reuters) - British luxury brand Burberry said on Monday it would license its fragrances and cosmetics to Coty in a deal totaling $225 million that will help it develop new products and benefit from the U.S. group's distribution.

Known for its British-made trenchcoats, Burberry's beauty range is led by fragrances My Burberry and Mr Burberry, and includes cosmetics to help introduce its brand to new consumers.

The company, which brought the perfume business in house in 2013, said it would retain creative control while Coty, which counts Gucci, Hugo Boss and Calvin Klein in its portfolio, would bring its global distribution network to the table.

Chief Financial Officer Julie Brown said Burberry had repositioned the business by cutting secondary-channel sales, and it was now the time to partner the premium fragrance leader.

"Coty has very broad experience of working closely with other luxury brands," she said in an interview. "We will benefit from their deep beauty industry expertise and also their first class distribution."

Coty will pay 130 million pounds for the long-term license, plus about 50 million pounds for inventory and other assets, Burberry said. It will also pay royalties from October.

Beauty contributed 7 percent of Burberry's revenue in the first half of its 2016/17 financial year, down 17 percent on the prior period, partly as a result of the repositioning.

It launched men's fragrance Mr Burberry a year ago and young British model Iris Law has promoted its cosmetics.

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The logo of Burberry outlet store is seen in Paris, France, March 10, 2016. REUTERS/Charles Platiau

Chief Operating Officer John Smith said there was an opportunity to grow cosmetics sales, which currently account for about 8 percent of beauty sales against an industry average of a third

"Make-up is a key recruitment tool for a luxury brand, in that the price points are a lot lower than any other product," he said. "As a means of recruiting people into the brand, it's perfect."

Shares in Burberry were trading up 1 percent at 1,739 pence.

Analysts at Exane BNP Paribas said they welcomed the choice of a first class partner to appropriately develop the business.

"In fact, we never liked the idea of Burberry managing its beauty business directly, as beauty is an FMCG (fast moving consumer goods) business where you win on the back of global reach," they said.

Burberry said the deal would be broadly neutral to adjusted profit before tax in 2017/18 and accretive the following year.

(Reporting by Kate Holton and Paul Sandle; editing by Susan Thomas)

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