Thanks queen1,
Some info from over the weekend:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/main.jhtml?xml=/money/2005/08/21/cnwpp21.xml
WPP's fine forecast will cheer industry
By Guy Dennis (Filed: 21/08/2005)
WPP, the UK-listed advertising giant, will on Friday unveil a sharp rise in first-half profits that may boost confidence in the media sector.
The company, which owns advertising businesses including JWT and public relations companies including Buchanan Communications, is understood to have lifted headline profits before tax to about 250m in the first half of this year. This is a rise of around 25 per cent on the first half of last year, once changes in accounting rules, known as IFRS 17, are taken into account.
Sir Martin Sorrell: If I was 25 years old again, I would learn Chinese and go to Shanghai
In the UK, WPP, which is led by chief executive Sir Martin Sorrell, is believed to have grown revenues slightly in the six months to the end of June. This is likely to surprise many media executives who have complained of a worsening UK advertising market.
Although the UK accounts for only about 15 per cent of WPP's total revenues, the company's performance is seen as a barometer for the market. Sorrell's views on the prospects for the advertising industry are influential and closely watched by investors.
Sorrell famously described the recovery from the worst downturn in the advertising industry as "bath-shaped". Last October, continuing his theme, Sorrell argued the industry had emerged from the bath, but warned about "damp showers" in 2005.
WPP's fastest-growing market is believed to be Latin America, where there has been a sharp rebound in the Argentinian economy, combined with continued growth in Mexico and Brazil.
Other rapidly growing markets for the company have been Eastern Europe, India and China.
The company is expected to report a rise in first-half revenues in China of between 20 and 25 per cent. It recently won a major account from China Telecom.
This is likely to have pleased Sorrell, who in a recent interview said that if he could be 25 years old again, he would "learn Chinese and go to Shanghai".
Success in fast-growing areas including internet advertising and direct marketing by WPP subsidiaries such as Wunderman and OgilvyOne have also helped boost the company's profits. WPP is increasingly viewing marketing services as a two-speed industry, split between high-growth areas such as the internet and more mature markets such as network television with slower growth.
The results this week are also likely to show that WPP is successfully integrating Grey Global, the US advertising company that it last year agreed to buy for 845m.
Sorrell has been keen to dramatically increase operating profits at Grey via synergies with the rest of WPP: merging computer systems, using property more efficiently, and using the larger group's purchasing power.
WPP's results are also understood to include a rise in total revenues of about 20 per cent to about 2.4bn, and a rise in earnings per share of about 25 per cent to around 13.5p per share.
Over the past year WPP shares have slightly outperformed the FTSE100 index, rising by 23 per cent compared with a 22 per cent rise in the index.