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Estee Lauder reaches $210 million settlement over China sales practices

By Thomson Reuters May 7, 2026 | 1:58 PM

By Jonathan Stempel

NEW YORK, May 7 (Reuters) – Estee Lauder has reached a $210 million settlement of a lawsuit accusing the cosmetic giant of defrauding ​shareholders by concealing its overdependence on improper gray-market ‌sales in China.

A preliminary all-cash settlement of the proposed class action was filed on Thursday in Manhattan federal court, and requires approval by U.S. District Judge Arun Subramanian.

The case concerned ‌a ​practice known as “daigou,” in which ⁠resellers buy luxury goods ⁠at low duty-free prices and resell the goods at below-market prices to consumers.

Shareholders said the company was heavily dependent on daigou, especially in the Hainan ​province, after the COVID pandemic began, and waited too long to reveal how a January 2022 Chinese ⁠government crackdown on the practice ⁠was hurting sales.

They said the New ​York-based company concealed the truth until November 1, 2023, causing ​its shares to plunge 19% and wiping out about $8.7 ‌billion of market value.

Estee generates about one-fifth of its sales in mainland China.

The company denied wrongdoing in agreeing to settle, and said insurance would cover some ⁠of the settlement costs.

Estee did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Subramanian had rejected Estee’s bid to dismiss the ⁠lawsuit in March ‌2025, faulting the company for touting ⁠reasons for its success “while leaving out the ​parts ‌of the truth it found inconvenient.”

The ​shareholders are ⁠led by three Michigan public pension funds. Their lawyers plan to seek up to 32% of the settlement fund, or $67.2 million, in fees, court papers show.

(eporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; Editing by Chris Reese ​and Will Dunham)