* South Korea is now No.2 cosmetics exporter to China
* Non-brand manufacturers reduce product development time
* Recent foreign investment in companies, others plan IPOs
* Investing in Korean firms convenient way into China
By Joyce Lee
SEOUL, Aug 4 (Reuters) - At an Innisfree cosmetics store in
Seoul's popular Myeongdong shopping district, a saleswoman helps
21-year-old Chinese tourist Yang Hui carry her shopping baskets
to the pay desk in front of a large display showing K-Pop star
Yoona.
"There's a lot to choose from," said Yang, confessing to
having bought more than she'd planned from the store's range of
around 900 products.
South Korea's top cosmetics company Amorepacific Group
002790.KS launches some 400 new Innisfree branded products a
year, about half of which are no longer available a year later.
It's one of dozens of Korean mass cosmetics brands with a
short product development cycle - a "fast beauty" approach that
is increasingly popular among Chinese and other Asian
millennials, gaining exposure in the United States and Europe,
and attracting high-profile foreign investment.
South Korea has become a hot-bed for applying to cosmetics
the "fast fashion" principles of shifting designs quickly from
catwalk to Main Street to capitalise on new trends.
Thousands of small cosmetics firms compete to get their new
products to market, with third-party manufacturers cutting the
time on testing and recipe alignment and providing the capacity
for swift market launch.
Korean brands have cut product development cycles to as
little as four months, compared to over a year for global
brands, industry experts say.
"When we received an eyeshadow order from a major global
client in 2004, it took us two years to begin production. Now it
takes us one year from the word go," said Lim Dae-gyu, a
director at Cosmax Inc 192820.KS , a cosmetics manufacturer
with annual sales of close to $500 million.
"For South Korean mass brands, it takes less - just 4-6
months from planning to market launch is average," Lim added.
WINNING FORMULA
South Korea last year overtook the United States and Japan
to become the No. 2 cosmetics exporter to China after France. It
shipped $1.1 billion worth of skincare creams, facial masks,
compacts and other cosmetic products to the world's
second-largest economy, according to the Ministry of Food and
Drug Safety.
South Korea's total cosmetics exports were worth $2.59
billion, up 44 percent from 2014, with Hong Kong and the United
States its second- and third-biggest markets, a long way behind
China.
Sales are boosted by South Korea's duty-free market - the
world's biggest - which caters especially to big-spending
Chinese tourists. Cosmetics accounted for nearly half of the
country's record duty-free revenue of 5.8 trillion won ($5.1
billion) in the first half of this year, customs data showed.
The trade is not without its downside. To counter unofficial
re-sales, Korea's Customs Service is considering setting a 50
product limit for duty-free buyers, a customs official said.
Analysts say this could dent sales by smaller firms, but note
that bigger companies already limit duty-free purchases to
control store inventory.
"New ingredients, new packaging, new formulas come on the
market continuously, and when something does well Korean brands
respond quickly," said Jang Jun-kee, managing director of the
Korea Cosmetics Foundation, an industry group.
Amorepacific's 2008 hit product, the cushion compact - a
multifunctional sponge applicator for anything from liquid
facial cover and sun protection to make-up base and moisturiser
- inspired follow-up products from global brands such as
L'Oreal's OREP.PA Lancome and Estee Lauder's EL.N Clinique.
Innovative, often cute, packaging also helps.
The Face Shop, a mass brand from South Korea's second-ranked
cosmetics firm LG Household & Health Care 051900.KS , said last
month it sold out of its initial 130,000 cushion compacts
featuring Disney characters - costing 20,000 won ($17.82) - in
just two days. It said it expects to launch about 600 new
products this year.
Beyond popularising beauty trends such as facial cosmetic
products "BB cream" and "CC cream", South Korea has a reputation
for innovation and for using natural and Oriental medicine
ingredients from flowers and tea leaves to donkey milk, snail
and seahorse to differentiate its so-called K-beauty products.
"Korean consumers are very sophisticated. Their interest in
beauty and expectations of cosmetics are high and they are
willing to try new concepts," L'Oreal Korea said in emailed
comments to Reuters. "It's a market where new trends emerge
before potentially going global."
CHINA FOUNDATION
For foreign investors, buying into the Korean success story
is a convenient way also into China, where locals can't get
enough of Korean TV dramas and K-Pop music.
"We find beauty and media-entertainment sectors to be the
most exciting (in Korea)," said Ravi Thakran, the chairman and
managing partner at L Capital Asia, a unit of LVMH LVMH.PA ,
which last month became a major shareholder in South Korean
colour cosmetics brand CLIO. urn:newsml:reuters.com:*:nL4N1A819W
"The popularity of Korean culture such as K-Pop, dramas and
celebrities boosted significant demand for Korean beauty
products in China and other Southeast Asian countries," he
added.
Beyond China, Korean cosmetics have also moved into chains
including LVMH's Sephora, Target TGT.N and Urban Outfitters
URBN.O , according to Korea's state-run trade agency KOTRA.
The LVMH unit's investment in CLIO came just weeks after
Goldman Sachs GS.N and Bain Capital Private Equity said they
were buying a majority stake in unlisted cosmetics maker Carver
Korea Co Ltd. urn:newsml:reuters.com:*:nL4N1A4069
($1 = 1,107.9000 won)
(Reporting by Joyce Lee, with additional reporting by Nataly
Pak; Editing by Ian Geoghegan)
((jungyoon.lee@thomsonreuters.com; +82 2 3704 5609; Reuters
Messaging: jungyoon.lee.thomsonreuters.com@reuters.net))
Keywords: SOUTHKOREA COSMETICS/