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RetailBankruptcy

Revlon missed the Instagram-fueled cosmetics boom. Now it’s filing for bankruptcy

By
Claire Boston
Claire Boston
and
Bloomberg
Bloomberg
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By
Claire Boston
Claire Boston
and
Bloomberg
Bloomberg
Down Arrow Button Icon
June 16, 2022, 5:41 AM ET

Revlon Inc. filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy, unable to manage its heavy debt load after failing to tap into a cosmetics sales boom driven by social-media influencers.

The cosmetics giant, owned by billionaire Ron Perelman, sought court protection in the Southern District of New York after the global supply chain crunch and steep inflation deepened its woes. 

Revlon has been unable to keep pace with rivals L’Oreal SA and Estee Lauder Cos. as well as upstart makeup and personal-care brands that have turned to video bloggers and Instagram personalities to fuel growth. 

In its court filings, Revlon listed assets totaling $2.3 billion as of late April. That stands in contrast to total debts of $3.7 billion, which include its 6.25% senior notes due in 2024, according to court papers dated June 15. 

Chapter 11 filings allow a company to continue operating while it works out a plan to repay creditors. The bankruptcy caps a tumultuous period for the company, which suffered during the pandemic and faced years of declining sales as consumer tastes changed and upstart brands ate into its market share. 

The 90-year-old company got its start selling nail polishes in the throes of the Great Depression, and later added coordinated lipsticks to its collection. By 1955, the brand was international. 

Perelman’s holding company, MacAndrews & Forbes Inc., took control of Revlon in an acrimonious takeover in 1985, funding the deal with junk debt raised by Michael Milken. MacAndrews & Forbes at one point sued Revlon over the company’s acceptance of a lower offer from Forstmann Little & Co., resulting in a landmark Delaware court decision on the fiduciary duties of board members, sometimes dubbed the “Revlon Rule.”

Apart from the dollar bond, Revlon has 10 loans with outstanding amount totaling about $2.6 billion and maturing in the next three years, Bloomberg-compiled data show. The company’s debt load proved burdensome, especially after it sold more than $2 billion of loans and bonds to fund its acquisition of Elizabeth Arden in 2016. It also owns brands including Cutex and Almay, and markets in more than 150 countries. 

In recent years, it’s struggled to compete with newer brands that advertise heavily on social media. The pandemic provided another blow, and more recently, the company struggled to address supply chain problems and inflation that dented margins. 

Revlon narrowly staved off multiple previous defaults by cutting deals with creditors to rework its obligations out of court, and later found itself ensnared in one of the banking industry’s most infamous blunders when Citigroup Inc. — intending to process a routine loan interest payment — instead mistakenly paid some Revlon creditors nearly $900 million. 

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