2023 universal registration document

2. Corporate governance

Information relating to directors and corporate officers pursuant to Annex 1 of Delegated European Regulation No. 2019/980
Family relationship between directors and corporate officers (Article 12.1 of the Annex)

Ms Françoise Bettencourt Meyers is the mother of Mr Jean‑Victor Meyers and Mr Nicolas Meyers.

Absence of any conviction or incrimination of the directors and corporate officers (Article 12.1 of the Annex)

To the Company’s knowledge, over the last five years, the directors and corporate officers have not been convicted for fraud, associated with a bankruptcy, receivership or liquidation, or the subject of any official public incrimination or sanction imposed by statutory or regulatory authorities (including designated professional bodies) or a decision by a court disqualifying them from acting as a member of an administrative, management or supervisory body or from acting in the management or conduct of the business of any issuer.

Potential conflicts of interest between the duties of the directors and corporate officers with regard to L’Oréal, and their private interests and/or other duties (Articles 12.2 and 16.3 of the Annex)

The method of organisation and modus operandi adopted by the Board would allow it, where applicable, to prevent any abusive exercise of their rights by one or more shareholders that come to control the Company, notably due to the presence of seven independent Directors on the Board of Directors.

Regarding any arrangement or agreement entered into with the major shareholders, customers, suppliers, or others, under which a Director was selected as a member of the Board of Directors, an agreement between the Bettencourt Meyers family and NestléS.A., which expired on 21 March 2018, concerned the reciprocal voting commitment in favour of the appointment as Directors of three members proposed by the Bettencourt Meyers family and two members proposed by Nestlé.

The Company was informed of the participation, amounting to 100 shares, of its Chairman, Mr Jean-Paul Agon, in the collective lock up agreements signed on 16 December 2016 by Téthys S.A.S. and members of the Bettencourt Meyers family group under the Dutreil law. The Nominations and Governance Committee Meeting of 6 December 2016 examined this arrangement prior to signature of the agreement and considered that it could not be contested on the basis of the Company’s interests, nor could it lead to consequences for the Company’s governance, and informed the Board of Directors accordingly.

The Company was informed that a new collective lock-up agreement was signed on 29 December 2023 under Article 787 B of the French General Tax Code, similar to those entered into in 2016 (which had been terminated earlier the same day), with the addition of the company Financière L’Arcouest (controlled by Ms Françoise Bettencourt Meyers and her family). The Nominations and Governance Committee Meeting of 6 December 2023 examined this arrangement in advance and confirmed that it could not be contested on the basis of the Company’s interests, nor could it lead to consequences for the Company’s governance, and informed the Board of Directors accordingly.

Information on service contracts with members of the administrative bodies (Article 12.2 of the Annex)

No directors or corporate officers have a service contract with L’Oréal or any of its subsidiaries providing for the granting of benefits upon termination of such contract.

Stock market ethics

The Board noted the rules to be applied to prevent insider trading, in particular those resulting from European Regulation (EU) No. 596/2014 on Market Abuse which became applicable on 3 July 2016, and the recommendations of the French financial markets authority (AMF), in particular regarding the periods during which it is prohibited from trading in shares. It decided to amend its Internal Rules accordingly.

On the basis of the legal provisions, regulations and market recommendations, L’Oréal’s Stock Market Ethics Code points out that inside information must only be passed on and used for professional purposes.

Inside information is information of a precise nature, which has not been made public and which, if it were made public, would likely to have a significant effect on the share price.

The Stock Market Code of Ethics restates the ban on any person in possession of insider information from executing or ordering the execution of financial transactions on L’Oréal shares, and emphasises that any misconduct in this area may result in criminal proceedings. The Internal Rules of the Board specifically ask Directors to refrain from trading in L’Oréal shares precisely in certain periods and when they have access to inside information.

The Directors are required to notify the AMF of each transaction carried out by them or by persons closely associated with them related to L’Oréal shares. This obligation is periodically restated by the Company (see summary of these operations in section 2.6.).