Business
E.l.f. Beauty posts earnings beat, raises full-year guidance
Elf Beauty cosmetics
Courtesy: e.l.f Beauty
E.l.f. Beauty reported a huge earnings beat Wednesday and raised its guidance for the fiscal year.
E.l.f. stock was up as much as 15% in after-hours trading before losing the majority of those gains.
Here’s what the company reported for the third fiscal quarter, compared with analyst estimates from LSEG:
- Earnings per share: $1.24 adjusted vs. 72 cents expected
- Revenue: $490 million vs. $460 million expected
E.l.f. said net sales increased 38% to $489.5 million, or $1.24 per share, up from $355 million, or 74 cents a share, in the same period a year ago, driven by growth across the globe and across its retailers and e-commerce. It reported adjusted net income of $74.5 million, up from $43 million over the same period a year ago.
The company recently acquired celebrity Hailey Bieber’s skin-care company, Rhode, in a roughly $1 billion deal, and it contributed $128 million to the company’s net third-quarter sales growth. E.l.f. told CNBC it’s projecting Rhode to contribute up to $265 million in net sales this year, up $65 million from its previous guidance.
E.l.f. also raised its full-year guidance, increasing its revenue outlook by a range of $42 million to $50 million.
“Our Q3 results, which included 130 basis points of market share gains for our namesake e.l.f. Cosmetics brand and a record-breaking launch of rhode in Sephora in the U.K., are a continuation of the consistent, category-leading growth we’ve delivered over the past 28 quarters,” CEO Tarang Amin said in a statement. “Our value proposition, powerhouse innovation and disruptive marketing engine continue to fuel our brands.”
— CNBC’s Jodi Gralnick contributed to this report.
Business
Government grant to reopen CO2 plant amid fears of Iran-linked shortages
A mothballed carbon dioxide plant is to be reopened with a Government grant of up to £100 million amid fears of shortages caused by the Iran war.
Business Secretary Peter Kyle signed off the grant to reopen the Ensus plant on Teesside, according to the Financial Times.
It is understood the grant will pay to get the plant up and running again for an initial three-month period.
The plant was mothballed last year after a trade deal with the US cut tariffs on bioethanol, its main product.
It will be reopened due to its ability to produce CO2 as a by-product. The gas is vital for several sectors, including drinks and the nuclear industry, but supply has been disrupted thanks to soaring energy costs on other sources such as fertiliser factories.
The grant for the Ensus plant is the first major intervention by the UK Government aimed at tackling possible shortages caused by the Iran conflict.
But fears range much wider than CO2, with former BP executive Nick Butler telling Times Radio the UK could face oil and gas shortages in two to three weeks.
He said: “There will be shortages and I think the Government now should be seriously planning how they’re going to handle that and part of that is maximising supply.”
On Tuesday, Shell chief executive Wael Sawan issued a similar warning at an industry conference.
Ministers continue to insist the supply of petrol remains reliable.
Energy minister Michael Shanks told MPs on Wednesday the Government was “absolutely not” planning for blackouts or petrol rationing, insisting the UK had a “strong and diverse range of supplies”.
The key question remains how long Iran’s effective blockade of the vital Strait of Hormuz will last.
On Thursday, Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper will urge Iran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz as she travels to the G7 Foreign Ministers’ meeting in France.
She will make clear that the UK will help ensure safe passage for ships through the strait and provide an additional £2m in humanitarian aid to Lebanon.
Ms Cooper is expected to hold talks with counterparts, including US secretary of state Marco Rubio, France’s Jean-Noel Barrot, and Germany’s Johann Wadephul.
The strait remained closed on Wednesday evening, despite Iran’s foreign minister Abbas Araghchi claiming it was open to “non-hostile” shipping.
The conflict continued with Washington saying it would hit Iran “harder” if Tehran refused to accept it had been “defeated militarily”.
White House spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt insisted “productive” talks were continuing between Washington and Tehran.
But Mr Araghchi said in a message on his Telegram channel, translated from Farsi, that there had been “no negotiations or discussions with the American side” and suggested the US had effectively admitted defeat.
He said: “Didn’t they talk about ‘unconditional surrender’ before? What happened now that they are talking about negotiations and calling for them?
“I will explain that there are no negotiations, but the fact that they are mobilising their highest officials to negotiate with the Islamic Republic indicates their acceptance of defeat.”
Business
Video: How Kharg Island May Change the Trajectory of the Iran War
new video loaded: How Kharg Island May Change the Trajectory of the Iran War
By Peter Eavis, Gilad Thaler, Edward Vega, Lauren Pruitt and Joey Sendaydiego
March 25, 2026
Business
Oil prices volatile as Trump talks up Iran negotiations
Crude rose back above $100 a barrel as the US and Iran clashed over bringing the conflict to an end.
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