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Estée Lauder Agrees to $210 Million Settlement in China Daigou Lawsuit

The settlement closes a major shareholder case tied to Estée Lauder’s historic reliance on grey-market sales in China and Hainan duty-free channels.

Cezary Kowalski
May 11, 2026 1 min read
Estée Lauder China settlement over daigou sales lawsuit

Estée Lauder has agreed to a $210 million all-cash settlement to resolve a proposed shareholder class action tied to its China sales practices. The case alleged that the company misled investors about its reliance on daigou resellers and failed to properly disclose the impact of China’s 2022 crackdown on that channel.

Investor Case Centered on China Exposure

The lawsuit was filed in Manhattan federal court and argued that the company concealed how dependent parts of its China business had become on grey-market reselling, particularly through Hainan. Reuters said the plaintiffs linked that issue to a 19% share-price drop in November 2023 that erased about $8.7 billion in market value.

Estée Lauder denied wrongdoing but agreed to settle, with Reuters reporting that insurance is expected to cover part of the payment. The proposed settlement still requires court approval.

Governance and Channel Risk

For Dewsia readers, the significance is not only legal. The case underlines how China’s distribution structures can create disclosure and governance risk when off-book demand channels become too important to reported performance.

Cezary Kowalski

I'm a journalist and editor with a background in trade publishing. I started Dewsia because the Asian beauty market - and Vietnamese skincare in particular - had no dedicated English-language editorial coverage. Not blogs, not influencer content: reporting. Brand histories, market data, regulatory shifts, and ingredient sourcing. Dewsia covers the full scope - news and analysis across Vietnamese, Korean, Japanese, and Chinese beauty - with a focus on the markets and brands that Western media overlooks.

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