Tag: Cannes Lions Festival

  • WPP slashes dividend in half as advertising giant struggles with client cuts

    WPP slashes dividend in half as advertising giant struggles with client cuts

    LONDON: WPP, the world’s biggest advertising agency, delivered a sobering performance in the first half of 2025, slashing its interim dividend by 50 per cent as profits tumbled and clients tightened their belts.
    The London-listed giant reported headline operating profit of £412m for the six months to June, down 36 per cent from £646m a year earlier. Revenue less pass-through costs—the industry’s preferred measure—fell 4.3 per cent on a like-for-like basis to £5.03bn.

    The company cut its interim dividend to 7.5p per share from 15p previously, with the board citing the need to give incoming chief executive Cindy Rose “room to review the group’s strategy and capital allocation policy”.
    Mark Read, who steps down as chief executive on 1 September after seven years at the helm, acknowledged the difficulties. “It has been a challenging first half given pressures on client spending and a slower new business environment,” he said.

    The results underscore the advertising industry’s struggles as companies slash marketing budgets amid economic uncertainty. WPP’s top 25 clients managed only flat growth, while key sectors including consumer goods and automotive weakened in the second quarter.

    WPP has made “significant progress” repositioning its media division, which replaced GroupM in May as part of chief executive Read’s drive to simplify the sprawling conglomerate. The unit, now called WPP Media, has undergone substantial restructuring to make it more client-focused.

    The company expects severance action taken in the second quarter alone to generate more than £150m of annual cost savings from 2026. Headcount has fallen 3.7 per cent since the start of the year to 104,000 people.
    Despite the gloom, WPP continues to invest heavily in artificial intelligence and data capabilities. Usage of WPP Open, its AI-powered marketing platform, has surged, with 85 per cent of client-facing staff now using it monthly, up from 60 per cent in March.

    The company also completed the acquisition of InfoSum, a data collaboration platform, and launched Open Intelligence, an AI tool designed to predict audience behaviour.

    Looking ahead, WPP expects like-for-like revenue less pass-through costs to decline between 3 per cent and 5 per cent for the full year. Headline operating profit margin is forecast to drop by 50 to 175 basis points.
    The company’s performance varied widely by region. North America, WPP’s largest market, saw revenue less pass-through costs fall 2.4 per cent, while China plunged 16.6 per cent amid persistent macroeconomic pressures.

    At the prestigious Cannes Lions festival in June, WPP was named creative company of the year, providing some cheer amid the financial turbulence. The group’s agencies secured 168 Lions, including a coveted Titanium Lion.

    Average adjusted net debt stood at £3.4bn at the end of June, giving a debt-to-EBITDA ratio of 1.98 times—outside the company’s target range of 1.5 to 1.75 times.

    Shares in WPP have struggled this year as investors fret about the advertising downturn and the company’s transformation efforts. The stock trades well below pre-pandemic levels, reflecting the challenges facing traditional advertising agencies in an increasingly digital world.

    Rose, who joins from Microsoft, faces the daunting task of restoring growth while maintaining WPP’s position as the industry leader. Her strategic review will be closely watched by investors hoping for a clearer path forward for the advertising behemoth.

  • Informa to acquire Cannes Lions owner Ascential for  $1.6 billion

    Informa to acquire Cannes Lions owner Ascential for $1.6 billion

    Mumbai: The festival of festivals for the advertising industry – the Cannes Lions –  is changing hands. Informa, an international B2B events, digital services, and academic markets group, earlier today announced that it has agreed to buy   Ascential – the owner of the Lions for a hefty 1.2 billion pounds. This acquisition adds the renowned advertising industry conference to Informa’s extensive portfolio of events.

    Informa group chief executive Stephen A. Carter said “As the world digitises at pace, our brands, our content and our market positions are becoming more valuable. This is moving Informa into a faster growth lane for performance, expansion and returns, as demonstrated by our full-year target of up to £1bn of adjusted operating profit and today’s recommended offer for Ascential plc”

    Carter was referring to the half-yearly results the company announced on 24 July. 
    Operating profit rose a healthy 18.8 per cent, revenue climbed up 11 per cent and dividends by  10 per cent. The acquisition of Ascential reflects Informa’s commitment to leveraging its market position and digital capabilities to foster growth.

    Shares in Ascential, which also owns the Money20/20 fintech event, surged by 26 per cent following the announcement, approaching the 568 pence per share cash offer from Informa. The deal, which is a 53 per cent premium over Ascential’s recent closing price, is expected to boost Informa’s adjusted earnings per share by at least 5 per cent in the first full year, driven by strong revenue growth and anticipated cost savings.