L’Oréal Eyes Big Bet on India’s D2C Boom with Innovist Deal

French beauty giant L’Oreal is in advanced talks to acquire a majority stake in Gurugram-based D2C personal care startup Innovist—a move that could become one of the largest strategic buyouts in India’s fast-growing consumer startup ecosystem.

Valued between $350 million and $450 million (₹3,240–₹4,170 crore)the potential deal signals L’Oréal’s renewed push to strengthen its presence in India, a market where it admits performance has fallen short of expectations.

In this article, we will delve into L’Oréal’s strategic push to acquire Innovist, the startup’s rapid rise in India’s D2C beauty space, and what this potential deal means for the evolving FMCG and consumer landscape.

Credits: ET Retail

A Phased Acquisition Strategy

According to sources, the deal is being structured in a phased manner. L’Oréal is initially looking to acquire a controlling stakefollowed by a gradual increase to full ownership over the next few years.

While the exact stake size in the first phase remains unclear, Innovist’s cap table includes founders holding 49.7%along with investors like Sauce VC, Point72 Ventures, ICICI Venturesand Patni Financial Advisors.

If negotiations proceed smoothly, the transaction could close as early as April-end.

Why Innovist?

Founded in 2018, Innovist has positioned itself as a “science-first” personal care platformwith a strong focus on clean formulations and in-house R&D. Its portfolio includes popular digital-first brands such as:

  • Bare Anatomy

  • Chemist at Play

  • Sunscoop

  • Vinci Botanicals

The startup has demonstrated explosive growth:

  • FY25 revenue: ₹300 crore (3x YoY growth)

  • Profit: ₹12 crore (vs ₹12.5 crore loss in FY24)

  • FY26 projection: ₹750–770 crore revenue, with sustained profitability

At the proposed valuation, Innovist is being priced at 4.3x–5.4x revenuealigning with typical consumer brand deal multiples.

L’Oréal’s India Reality Check

The acquisition talks come at a critical juncture for L’Oréal. During a recent earnings call, CEO Nicolas Hieronymus openly acknowledged that India is “not meeting expectations.”

Despite high single-digit growth, the company has struggled to gain significant market share. Currently, India contributes just ~1% to L’Oréal’s global revenuehighlighting massive untapped potential.

To change this, L’Oréal has:

  • Revamped its India leadership team

  • Invested in manufacturing capacity

  • Announced a new tech center in Hyderabad

  • Expanded its dermatological beauty portfolio with launches like CeraVe and La Roche-Posay

The Innovist deal fits squarely into this “change gears” strategygiving L’Oréal immediate access to digital-native consumers and fast-growing premium segments.

Rising Competition in India’s Beauty Market

Innovist operates in an intensely competitive ecosystem, going up against brands like:

  • Jerk off

  • Honasa Consumer

  • Sugar Cosmetics

  • Plum

  • MyGlamm

  • Pilgrim

At the same time, global players are increasingly taking the inorganic route. Earlier this month, Estée Lauder Companies moved to acquire full control of Forest Essentialsunderlining rising global interest in India’s beauty segment.

A Potential Second Big Exit

For Innovist co-founder Rohit Chawlathis could mark his second major exit. He previously built The Man Companywhich was acquired by Emami Ltd. in 2024 for around ₹400 crore.

If he exits fully, this would reinforce his reputation as one of India’s early D2C success stories.

The Bigger Trend: FMCG Meets D2C

The potential deal reflects a broader shift in India’s consumer landscape. Traditional FMCG giants like Marico and ITC Limited are aggressively acquiring or investing in D2C brands to stay relevant.

According to CRISIL Ratings:

This creates a win-win dynamic:

Not Satisfied with India', L'Oreal Eyes $450-Mn Bet on Personal Care  Startup Innovist to Turn the Tide – Outlook Business

Credits: Outlook Business

The Bottom Line

If completed, the L’Oréal–Innovist deal will not just be a large-ticket acquisition—it will symbolize a strategic pivot. For L’Oréal, it’s about reclaiming momentum in India. For Innovist, it’s about scaling globally with a powerful partner.

And for the broader ecosystem, it’s another strong signal that India’s D2C wave is no longer emerging—it’s being absorbed into the mainstream.

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