French cosmetic giant Loreal has invested $383.4 million to build a pioneer site on AI beauty technology in Hyderabad, thus heralding a turning point shift to the technology frontier that is rising in Asia.

Deal Details

In 2030, L’Oreal plans to invest more than 35 billion Indian rupees to establish this global AI innovation hub in the Hyderabad area of southern India. The hub will create solutions that are AI-powered (such as generative and agentic AI), which will speed up rollout of products globally. 

It will generate 2,000 high-technology positions in 2030, including specialists in AI and engineers, and will support developing local talents.

Strategic Partnership

The deal with Telangana officials was signed by the Hyderabas CEO, Nicolas Hieronimus, at the World Economic Forum in Davos thus bringing to light the role of Hyderabad as a southern Indian technology hub.

India is a very strategic market for L’Oréal

Said Hieronimus, as reported by The Economic Times.

We intend to more than double our business in the next couple of years, expand our factories which are today manufacturing 95% of what we sell in India and also exporting to [the] rest of the region. So, it is a country of opportunities and one of the fastest beauty markets in the world, and is a big priority for L’Oréal.

India-France Boom

The $15 billion bilateral trade between India and France stands as the result of cooperation between Prime Minister Narendra Modi and President Emmanuel Macron, through bilateral talks on trade. A new tax treaty, which was in effect as of 2024, has increased openness and made it easier to invest. 

The beauty market of India is currently rated as one of the fastest and most growing markets in the world hence the strategy of L’Oreal to potentially increase its business presence in India in the near future.

Future Impact

The hub puts L’Oreal at the top to have cycles of innovation that are swift than the industry metrics, thus, rising over industry rivals on the quest of customized AI in beauty.

This AI investment at the beginning offers an essential advantage to L’Oreal, as it allows it to offset the slowdown of the Western market and establish a stable market position in the long-run. 

India’s beauty and personal care market, currently valued at ₹2,43,236 crore ($28 billion), is projected to grow at an annual rate of 10-11%, reaching ₹2,95,358 crore ($34 billion) by 2028.

Hyderabad is expected to compete even with the world technology capitals and to upscale the level of the beauty sector which is forecasted to leap to $40.80 billion by 2030 from $22.77 billion in 2023, according to Grand View Research.