Coty Inc. (COTY) is getting a new leader from the consumer products big leagues. The beauty company announced Monday that Markus Strobel will take over as Executive Chairman and Interim CEO starting January 1, 2026, bringing with him three decades of experience from Procter & Gamble (PG).
A Consumer Products Heavy Hitter
Strobel isn't exactly coming in cold. He wrapped up a 33-year stint at Procter & Gamble where he most recently ran Global Skin & Personal Care, managing a portfolio worth billions across more than a dozen major brands. That's the kind of operational scale that could prove valuable as Coty navigates its next chapter.
He'll be replacing two significant figures. Peter Harf is retiring after more than 30 years on Coty's Board, during which he helped build the company into a global beauty powerhouse. Sue Nabi, meanwhile, is stepping down as CEO after a five-year run that included launching successful fragrances like Burberry Goddess and notably bringing the company's net leverage down to around 3x.
Cleaning Up the Balance Sheet
The leadership transition comes on the heels of a major asset sale. Last week, Coty offloaded its remaining 25.8% stake in Wella to accounts managed by KKR & Co. Inc. and its affiliates. The deal brought in $750 million in upfront cash, plus Coty gets 45% of any proceeds from a future sale or IPO after KKR hits its preferred return threshold.
That cash injection matters. Combined with the company's strong free cash flow performance of over $350 million in the first half of fiscal 2026, Coty expects to push its net leverage down to approximately 3x by the end of 2025. For a company focused on financial flexibility, that's meaningful progress.
As for the market's reaction? Coty shares slipped 0.31% to $3.25 in premarket trading Monday, hovering near the stock's 52-week low of $3.12. Investors seem to be taking a wait-and-see approach as the beauty company enters its transition period.




