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Estée Lauder and Spanish perfumery Puig have officially ended their merger talks, a decision that sent Estée Lauder shares soaring over 10% in extended trading. The proposed deal, first disclosed in March, would have created a massive $40 billion luxury beauty conglomerate combining brands like Clinique and MAC with Charlotte Tilbury and Carolina Herrera. However, investors and analysts welcomed the termination, relieved that the company avoided massive integration risks, balance sheet strain, and management distraction during a critical operational overhaul.

Sources familiar with the matter revealed that complex negotiations were further complicated by demands from makeup mogul Charlotte Tilbury, the founder of the namesake brand majority-owned by Puig. Analysts, including RBC Capital Markets, noted that the timing was highly impractical given the underlying complexities of combining two massive, family-controlled empires. Additionally, Estée Lauder is already in the middle of a major internal restructuring plan under CEO Stephane de La Faverie, aimed at reversing three consecutive years of sales and market share declines.

Moving forward, Estée Lauder will prioritize its internal “Beauty Reimagined” strategy, which includes heavy store investments, aggressive job cuts, and closing underperforming outlets to drive sustainable long-term growth. Despite pulling the plug on this specific mega-merger to prioritize its turnaround, the cosmetics giant emphasized that it will continue to evaluate future strategic acquisitions and divestitures to strengthen its market position against industry leader L’Oréal.

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Paramount Skydance’s latest $108.4 billion offer to acquire Warner Bros Discovery has been deemed insufficient by major shareholder Harris Oakmark. Owning roughly 4% of Warner Bros shares, the investor emphasized that while Paramount’s amended bid addressed some concerns, it still falls short of providing adequate incentive, leaving the two competing offers — Paramount’s and Netflix’s — as a “toss-up” for shareholders.

The revised Paramount offer includes a $40.4 billion personal guarantee from Oracle co-founder Larry Ellison and an increased breakup fee of $5.8 billion if regulators block the deal. However, the $30-per-share bid remains unchanged, prompting Warner Bros’ board to recommend shareholders reject Paramount’s earlier offer in favor of Netflix, whose bid of $23.25 per share is seen as more secure and includes additional Netflix stock and benefits from the Discovery Global spin-off.

Investors highlight the value of Warner Bros’ premium media assets, including HBO Max and major franchises like Harry Potter and Superman. While some, like Thomas Poehling, may accept Paramount’s revised offer if Netflix doesn’t counter, many others are likely to follow the board’s guidance, reflecting both the complexity of the deal and the importance of stable financing in determining the outcome.

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