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As budgets stagnate, Omnicom, Publicis, IPG, Havas and WPP deliver mixed results in Q3

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By Barry Dudley, Director

October 23, 2024 | 8 min read

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With Halloween just around the corner and the IPA’s latest Bellwether talking of ‘stagnating’ marketing budgets in the UK, a fearless Barry Dudley of Green Square looks at Omnicom, Publicis, Havas, IPG and WPP’s Q3 results to see what horrors lie within.

Both Omnicom and Publicis released their Q3 results last week and, despite some pretty mad things going on in the world right now, I’d say they are pretty good.

Omnicom reported organic growth of 6.5% with revenues of $3.9bn, up from $3.6bn in Q3 of 2023. Key to this were a 9.4% increase for Advertising & Media and a very impressive 35.3% jump in Experiential. The Healthcare and Branding & Retail Commerce disciplines struggled, however, with 1.1% and 5.4% declines respectively. The latter is surprising as retail has been a hot area of late, with agencies such as Next15’s SMG roaring ahead.

All geographies saw growth of between 6.5% (US) and 24.8% (Middle East & Africa), except for Other North America at 1.5% and a decline of 0.2% in the UK. This UK performance probably reflects the recent findings by the Institute of Practitioners in Advertising that said that many companies were ‘pressing pause’ on their marketing budgets ahead of the government’s budget next week.

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Publicis also delivered a strong performance in Q3, with organic growth of 5.8% to €3.4bn, up from €3.2bn in Q3 of 2023.

Chairman and CEO Arthur Sadoun said: “Once again, we were able to gain market share by capturing a disproportionate amount of client demand for personalization at scale, with our combined media and Epsilon activities growing at almost 10%. All of our regions delivered strongly, with the US at +4%, Europe at +4.9% and APAC at +6.4%, with China accelerating to +12.4%”.

Despite the “increasingly challenging macroeconomic environment,” Sadoun is maintaining his typical bullishness by upgrading the full-year organic growth guidance to at least 5.5%, up from 5%.

Publicis was also on the front foot with its M&A activity, spending a tidy $1bn during the quarter on acquiring Influential, an influencer marketing platform, and Mars United Commerce, a commerce marketing company.

Interpublic Group (IPG) released its results this week, with organic revenue ‘unchanged’ at $2.63bn from Q3 2023 ($2.68bn) – so quite some way behind Omnicom and Publicis. And the outlook for the full year also remains largely unchanged, with CEO Philippe Krakowsky commenting: “Looking forward, we are seeing a strong new business pipeline, for both Q4 activity and longer-term AOR opportunities, and we remain focused on achieving organic growth of approximately 1% this year.” Although this 1% is at the lower end of the 1% to 2% in previous guidance.

In terms of regional performance, IPG’s strongest market was Latin America, with 9.8% organic net revenue growth. But its biggest market, the US, saw no growth, while Continental Europe was up 0.6%, UK down 0.7%, Asia Pacific down a lumpy 7.4% and All Other Markets were up 1.5%. That seems like there are quite a few headwinds in quite a few places – I’d hazard a guess that the upcoming US election is a factor for that geography.

In times gone by, it could have been the likes of R/GA and Huge to bring bright news for IPG, but both are now ‘held for sale’ with conversations, according to Krakowsky, “a good way down the track.”

Next up was Havas, reported within its parent company Vivendi’s results. Yannick Bolloré, chairman of Vivendi’s supervisory board, and Arnaud de Puyfontaine, CEO of Vivendi, said: “Vivendi has reported strong growth in the first nine months of 2024. The revenues of the Group increased by 4.5% at constant currency and perimeter compared with the same period in 2023. Canal+ experienced revenue growth across all of its activities. The performance delivered by Havas was particularly driven by Havas Media and the Europe and Latin America regions.” They subsequently added: “These performances confirm the strength of our main businesses and their capacity to become independent if the shareholders’ meeting convened on December 9, 2024, approves the group’s proposed split project.”

A confident message around Havas and its potential independent stock exchange listing in the future. This seems a little at odds with a 2.3% organic revenue decline in Q2 and a 3.5% decline in Q3 against the corresponding periods in 2023, but a Q3 decline was forecast in Q2 mainly due to a ‘partial loss of a big client in the US.’ The hope in Q2 was for a return to organic growth in Q4 or maybe in 2025. Let’s see!

Europe and Latin America had solid organic growth at 2.8% and 12.1%, respectively. Asia-Pacific and Africa declined 0.6% and, much like IPG, North America was a challenge with a 7.5% decline.

But there was no slowdown in the Havas M&A team adding Hotglue, an Aussie ‘media agency and creative production company’ and DPMG in the UK, an ‘Adobe top 3 recommended independent agency.’

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And then there was WPP. Mark Read, CEO, said: “Our third quarter delivered like-for-like growth in net sales, with a strong performance from GroupM in particular. We saw growth in North America, Western Continental Europe and India, though trading in China remains difficult.”

He went on to say: “We are encouraged by progress during the quarter, but with recent new business wins primarily impacting 2025 and continuing macroeconomic pressures, our expectations for the full year remain unchanged.”

An interesting point for me was the 7% growth in Q3 for its top 10 clients. Winning new clients is the lifeblood of the agency world, both for the maths as well as the excitement and challenge for the talent, and we regularly tell the businesses we work with that their existing clients should be the number one business development opportunity.

More results are still to come and I expect the variety of fortunes to be extended further!

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