2024 Interim Results
|
7 August
2024
|
Sequential improvement in LFL
growth in Q2. Strong progress against January 2024 strategic
objectives and significant value unlocked from sale of majority
stake in FGS Global. Full year LFL guidance now -1% to 0%
reflecting macro pressures and weakness in China
Key
figures (£m)
|
H1 2024
|
+/(-) %
reported1
|
+/(-)
%
LFL2
|
H1 2023
|
|
|
|
|
|
Revenue
|
7,227
|
0.1
|
2.6
|
7,221
|
Revenue less pass-through
costs
|
5,599
|
(3.6)
|
(1.0)
|
5,811
|
|
|
|
|
|
Reported:
|
|
|
|
|
Operating profit
|
423
|
38.2
|
|
306
|
Operating profit
margin3
|
5.9%
|
1.7pt
|
|
4.2%
|
Diluted EPS (p)
|
18.8
|
82.5
|
|
10.3
|
Dividends per share (p)
|
15.0
|
0.0
|
|
15.0
|
|
|
|
|
|
Headline4:
|
|
|
|
|
Operating profit
|
646
|
(3.0)
|
0.5
|
666
|
Operating profit margin
|
11.5%
|
0.0pt
|
0.1pt
|
11.5%
|
Diluted EPS (p)
|
30.9
|
(6.6)
|
|
33.1
|
H1
and Q2 highlights
• H1
reported revenue +0.1%, LFL revenue +2.6%.
H1 revenue less pass-through costs -3.6%, LFL
revenue less pass-through costs -1.0%
•
Q2 LFL revenue less pass-through costs
-0.5%, with North America
+2.0% and Western Continental Europe +0.3%, offset by the UK -5.3%
and Rest of World -2.2%, with growth in India +9.1% offset by a
decline in China -24.2%
•
Global Integrated Agencies Q2 LFL revenue less pass-through
costs fell 0.6% with GroupM growing 1.4%, offset by a 2.4% decline
at integrated creative agencies
•
Top ten clients5 grew 2.5%
in H1. CPG, TME6 and automotive client sectors grew well
in Q2. Technology client sector stabilising, with a decline of 1.0%
LFL in Q2, an improvement from Q1's -9.0%. Healthcare and retail
sectors impacted by 2023 client losses
• Strong
progress on strategic initiatives with new products and solutions
launched within WPP Open, our AI-powered marketing operating
system, and Burson, GroupM and VML on track to deliver targeted
savings
•
Agreement
to sell WPP's
majority stake in FGS Global to KKR at an enterprise valuation of
$1.7bn, generating total cash proceeds to WPP of
c.£604m7 after tax. Proceeds will be used to reduce
leverage, implying pro-forma average net debt to EBITDA of
c.1.60x8, comfortably within the range of
1.50-1.75x
•
H1 headline operating profit £646m. Headline operating margin
of 11.5% (H1 2023: 11.5%), up 0.1pt LFL, reflecting disciplined
cost management as we continue to invest in our proposition. H1
reported operating profit £423m up 38.2%, reflecting the above
factors and lower restructuring costs of £153m (H1 2023:
£267m)
•
$1.7bn net new billings9
(H1 2023: $2.0bn), with Q2 net new billings $0.9bn (Q2 2023:
$0.5bn). New client wins included assignments for AstraZeneca,
Colgate-Palmolive, J&J and Government of
Canada
• Adjusted net
debt as at 30 June 2024 £3.4bn down £0.1bn
year-on-year
• Interim dividend of 15.0p
declared (2023: 15.0p)
•
2024 guidance updated: LFL
revenue less pass-through costs of -1% to 0% (previously 0% to 1%),
with improvement in headline operating profit margin of 20-40bps
(excluding the impact of FX)
Mark Read, Chief Executive Officer of WPP,
said:
"At our Capital Markets Day earlier
this year we set out our strategy to build on and improve the
competitiveness of WPP's offer. I am very pleased with the progress
we have made in the past six months against each of our strategic
objectives, particularly our continued investment in AI, the
creation of VML and Burson, and the simplification of GroupM. We
are strengthening our offer for clients
while building a more efficient company.
"Our second quarter performance
delivered sequential improvement in net sales10 with
continued growth in GroupM, Ogilvy and Hogarth and sequential
improvement at Burson, VML and our Specialist Agencies.
Importantly, we also saw North America return to growth in the
second quarter. That said, we have seen pressure in China and in
our project-related businesses which, together with an uncertain
macro environment, has led us to moderate our expectations for the
full-year.
"The sale of our stake in FGS Global
is an excellent outcome less than four years after its creation
from three separate businesses within WPP. It will allow us to
focus and invest in our core creative transformation offer while
significantly strengthening our financial position.
"As a team, our priority continues
to be improving our competitiveness by delivering a modern, global,
creative and integrated offer for our clients. The steps we have
taken since January to integrate our offer, bring in new talent and
invest in AI represent strong progress towards delivering on our
medium-term financial targets and to shareholders."
WPP's 2024 Interim Results announcement has been submitted in
full unedited text to the Financial Conduct Authority's National
Storage Mechanism and will be available shortly for inspection
at https://data.fca.org.uk/#/nsm/nationalstoragemechanism.
The Report is also available at http://www.rns-pdf.londonstockexchange.com/rns/4675Z_1-2024-8-6.pdf and
on the WPP investor relations website www.wpp.com/investors.
This announcement contains information that qualifies or may
qualify as inside information. The person responsible for arranging
the release of this announcement on behalf of WPP plc is Balbir
Kelly-Bisla, Company Secretary.
For
further information:
|
|
|
|
|
Media
|
|
|
Investors and analysts
|
|
Chris Wade
|
+44 20 7282 4600
|
|
Tom Waldron
|
+44 7788 695864
|
|
|
|
Anthony Hamilton
|
+44 7464 532903
|
Richard Oldworth
|
+44 7710 130 634
|
|
Caitlin Holt
|
+44 7392 280178
|
Burson Buchanan
|
+44 20 7466 5000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
irteam@wpp.com
|
|
press@wpp.com
|
|
|
wpp.com/investors
|
|
1. Percentage change in reported sterling.
2. Like-for-like. LFL comparisons are calculated as follows:
current year, constant currency actual results (which include
acquisitions from the relevant date of completion) are compared
with prior year, constant currency actual results from continuing
operations, adjusted to include the results of acquisitions and
disposals for the commensurate period in the prior year.
3. Reported operating profit divided by revenue (including
pass-through costs).
4. In this press release not all of the figures and ratios used
are readily available from the unaudited interim results included
in Appendix 1. Management believes these non-GAAP measures,
including constant currency and like-for-like growth, revenue less
pass-through costs and headline profit measures, are both useful
and necessary to better understand the Group's results. Details of
how these have been arrived at are shown in Appendix 4.
5. Top 10 clients by revenue less pass-through costs in H1 2023.
Growth rate includes the impact of a client loss in the healthcare
sector.
6. Telecommunications, Media and Entertainment.
7. Comprising £557m consideration (after tax) for WPP's c.50%
stake as well as a net £47m inflow for the repayment of a loan from
WPP to FGS, less FGS's cash on balance sheet.
8. Pro-forma average adjusted net debt to headline EBITDA (last
12 months) (including depreciation of right-of-use assets) of
c.1.60x, versus WPP's average adjusted net debt to headline EBITDA
(last 12 months) (including depreciation of right-of-use assets) of
c.1.84x at 30 June 2024. Calculated by reducing WPP's average
adjusted net debt over the last twelve months by the expected cash
proceeds after tax of c.£604m and reducing headline EBITDA by FGS's
headline EBITDA contribution.
9. As defined in the glossary on page 45.
10. "Net sales" refers to revenues less pass-through
costs.
Strategic progress
At our Capital Markets Day in
January 2024, we announced the next phase of our strategy -
'Innovating to Lead' - to improve our competitive performance,
embrace the opportunities of AI, data and technology and drive
financial returns; and we have continued to make strong progress
against each of our four strategic pillars.
Lead through AI, data and
technology
It's clear that AI is going to
fundamentally change the way in which our clients reach consumers,
the way in which we deliver and produce work and the way in which
we operate as a company. While it is undoubtedly early days in the
application of AI to marketing, we can see enough already to know
that its impact will be significant.
At our Capital Markets Day, we laid
out our plans to embrace AI and invest in the technology and data
that is required. WPP Open, our intelligent marketing operating
system powered by AI, is a critical component of our strategy,
enabling us to use AI in how we work. But it is also important to
understand that this is only one part of our strategy. We also need
to train and upskill our teams, engage with our clients and create
new, AI-driven experiences.
We have continued to invest in WPP
Open as part of our annual investment of £250m in AI-driven
technology. We have developed new functionality and integrated new
AI models and as a result, have seen growing adoption and usage
across WPP and by our clients.
Since the start of the year, we are
seeing monthly active users up 74%, LLM
usage up 177% and image generation up 241%. We are also seeing
growing adoption by clients, with key
clients using the platform including Google, IBM, L'Oréal, LVMH,
Nestlé and The Coca-Cola Company. In particular, clients are seeing
significant value in using WPP Open to streamline how they work
with WPP, using the workflow elements of the platform to
standardise processes.
Functionality and Model Integration
WPP Open is a single marketing
operating system that powers all of WPP's businesses. The core
Studios - Creative, Production, Media, Experience, Commerce and PR
- are designed to support key functional areas with AI-powered
applications in a way that allows for integrated ways of working
across the company.
WPP Open's Creative Studio gained
further functionality to support our strategy and creative teams.
In May, we announced a collaboration to integrate Anthropic's
Claude AI model family using Amazon Bedrock, a fully managed
service from Amazon Web Services ('AWS'), and in June, WPP and
IBM
announced WPP Open B2B, powered by
watsonx, bringing together IBM's generative AI technology and
consulting capabilities with WPP's industry expertise to deliver
higher conversion rates and lower costs for B2B
marketers.
WPP Open's Media Studio was deployed
more broadly to clients in the first half with an end-to-end
workflow solution accessing GroupM's scale, and Choreograph data
and technology. It enables the automation of complex media
decisions, choosing from thousands of AI-powered strategies and
leveraging 2.3 trillion AI-evaluated impressions to build unique
audiences and activate and measure campaigns across a full range of
channels.
Media Studio provides access to
Choreograph's global data graph that enables intelligent activation
across more than 73 markets and 5 billion consumer profiles. That
includes access to AmeriLINK, our data asset in the US, containing
10,000 attributes on more than 300 million addressable individuals,
with particular strength in data on consumer health and age. We are
able to further contextualise and enrich that data graph with data
that we generate from planning, optimisation and campaigns across GroupM.
We launched our upgraded Performance
Brain™ at Google Cloud Next in April, allowing us to predict creative effectiveness before the first
media impression is served, allowing clients to improve the ROI on
their media and creative investments.
We also announced the integration
into Media Studio of services from
Incremental, a leading provider of
neutral retail media solutions, incorporating their retail media
forecasting, planning and measurement capabilities, and from
Shalion, a retail intelligence leader,
integrating their advanced retail media, digital shelf analytics,
and unified market intelligence across 18 markets and more than
5,000 retailer and category combinations.
In June, we launched Production
Studio, an AI-enabled, end-to-end production application.
Production Studio is based on our multi-year partnership with
NVIDIA, allowing us to develop industry-first solutions that
provide the brand and product fidelity and the design control
needed in developing advertising content.
In July, at SIGGRAPH, the annual
computer graphics conference, we
unveiled the next phase of our
partnership with NVIDIA - using new NVIDIA NIM microservices and
Shutterstock's 3D asset library to create brand-compliant
generative 3D landscapes and worlds. The Coca-Cola Company will be
one of the first of WPP's clients to begin scaling the
opportunities of generative 3D across its 100 markets. WPP has also
been working with Ford to build physically accurate, real-time
digital twins of its vehicles to create car configurators that
customers can explore and adapt according to their
needs.
Our Work with Clients
Not only is AI enabling us to
innovate in how we work with clients and to produce work in new
ways, it's also allowing us to develop new ground-breaking consumer
experiences for our clients. We continue to lead the way in
demonstrating the power of the technology to build more relevant
and personalised experiences for our clients.
Some examples include:
•
Mars' Snickers Own Goal from T&Pm:
Powered by AI technology from ElevenLabs, Synclabs and Open AI,
this application uses a personalised AI José Mourinho to humorously
coach fans out of their "own goals". By generating custom video
responses for fans' mistakes, this campaign leverages AI to create
unique, shareable content and engage fans in a new, interactive
way. The application is integrated with WhatsApp
for social sharing and co-created with agency
Helo.
•
Coke SoundZ for The Coca-Cola Company
by WPP Open X,
led
by AKQA: An AI-powered instrument
creating uplifting tunes from Coca-Cola's iconic sounds. This
innovative auditory branding engages consumers through sound
psychology, featuring both digital and physical versions.
Collaborations with artists like Marshmello have amplified its
impact, reinforcing Coca-Cola's leadership in innovative marketing
and delivering more than 500 million
impressions globally.
•
Mondelēz's
Bournvita D For Dreams by Ogilvy and Wavemaker:
Uses advanced AI technology to offer children
personalised cricket training from legend Rahul Dravid. The AI tool
tracks kids' time spent in the sun, translating it into virtual
coaching sessions, and so promoting Vitamin D intake. The campaign
combines AI-driven interactive experiences with the nutritional
benefits of Bournvita, encouraging outdoor activity and health
awareness.
Accelerate growth through the
power of creative transformation
Creativity is what sets WPP apart,
and when combined with AI, technology, data and the largest global
media platform, we have an unparalleled integrated offer to
clients.
That offer is resonating well, as
reflected in growth across our largest clients. The first half of
the year saw expansion in scope for many top clients, with wins
including media assignments for Nestlé and Colgate-Palmolive's
decision to name WPP as its Amazon agency of record for
Europe.
We continue to win industry
recognition for our creative excellence. In June, the Cannes Lions
International Festival of Creativity named WPP as 'Creative Company
of the Year' for 2024, with Ogilvy taking home 'Creative Network of
the Year'. WPP agencies collected a total of 160 Lions, including a
Titanium, 6 Grand Prix, 27 Gold, 43 Silver and 83 Bronze
Lions.
The Coca-Cola Company, whose global
marketing partner is WPP Open X, was named 'Creative Brand of the
Year' for the first time in its history. This follows the
announcement in May that Unilever, one of WPP's largest clients,
was named 'Creative Marketer of the Year' for 2024, thanks in part
to work from WPP agencies on its brands.
WPP's media agencies
EssenceMediacom, Mindshare and Wavemaker also made a very strong
showing at the festival, with GroupM ending the week as the
industry's leading media group with 90 Lions, up from 59 last
year.
In addition, WPP's agencies won the
most awards at this year's Clio Health competition in June, with a
total of more than 50 awards across Grand, Gold, Silver, and Bronze
categories, further solidifying WPP's position as a leader in
health marketing and communications.
Build world-class,
market-leading brands
We have made excellent progress
towards building stronger world-class brands.
VML launched in January 2024 and, by
the end of the first-half, the integration of VMLY&R and
Wunderman Thompson was broadly complete. VML played a key role in
recent client assignment wins, including AstraZeneca,
Colgate-Palmolive and Perrigo.
The new Burson agency launched in
June, with the new leadership team in place
globally and in most markets around the world. As a further
simplification of our offer, Buchanan Communications joined Burson
under the brand Burson Buchanan with the intention to expand its
offer into the United States.
The GroupM simplification
initiative also progressed well in the
first half. We made good progress on the structural cost
actions, with GroupM operating as one
entity in markets around the world. As part of this, we have
launched Media Studio, a key component of WPP Open, bringing
together key media tools and simplifying our go-to-market
proposition. Execution of the plan will continue through the second
half with all related cost actions due to be complete in
2024.
In July, WPP announced the
appointment of Brian Lesser as the new Global CEO of GroupM,
succeeding Christian Juhl, who will be moving to a new role within
WPP. Brian is a leading industry figure with a track record of
creating addressable advertising products and technology. He
previously spent 10 years with WPP, joining with the acquisition of
24/7 Real Media in 2007, and most recently serving as CEO of GroupM
in North America from 2015 to 2017.
In the final COMvergence report for
2023, GroupM remained the largest media planning and buying agency
by some distance with leading positions in key global markets such
as China, India, Japan, Germany and the UK, and an unchanged #2
position in the US.
GroupM continues to invest in retail
media initiatives around the world, and of particular note is its
partnership with Tesco to create a Media and Insight Platform,
powered by dunnhumby, to deliver best-in-class delivery of data-led
solutions, education and innovation across all areas of retail
media in the UK.
We have a strong pipeline of new
business in media, and while our new business performance at GroupM
in North America was below our expectations in the first half of
the year, we expect that the actions that we are taking will see an
improvement in our competitive performance and success
rate.
Execute efficiently to drive
financial returns through margin and cash
As well as the structural cost
savings relating to the initiatives above, we are making good
progress in our back-office efficiency programme across enterprise
IT, finance, procurement and real estate.
In enterprise IT, we successfully
rolled out Maconomy in certain markets in EMEA and South America in
the first half. Our cloud migration continued to deliver benefits
as we migrate workloads to the cloud and decommission legacy
equipment and capacity.
Across IT and Finance, we continue to optimise our finance shared service
centres, including migrating teams from VML in North America and
Brazil, and WPP HQ.
Our category-led procurement model
continues to consolidate spend by sub-category to drive further
savings. We are digitalising our source-to-contract
processes, enabling further automation as
we consolidate our ERP landscape.
In real estate, our ongoing campus
programme and consolidation of leases continues to deliver
benefits. Several new campus openings are planned
for the second half of 2024, including WPP's third London
campus.
We have also opened a new operations
and delivery hub in Wuxi, Jiangsu as part of an ongoing
optimisation of our cost base in China.
Purpose and ESG
WPP's purpose is to use the power of
creativity to build better futures for our people, planet, clients
and communities. Read more on the ways WPP is working to deliver
against its purpose in our 2023
Sustainability Report.
First half overview
Revenue was £7.2bn, up 0.1% from
£7.2bn in H1 2023, and up 2.6%
like-for-like. Revenue less pass-through costs was £5.6bn, down
3.6% from £5.8bn in H1 2023, and down 1.0%
like-for-like.
|
Q2 2024
£m
|
%
reported
|
%
M&A
|
%
FX
|
%
LFL
|
Revenue
|
3,815
|
1.4
|
0.3
|
(2.0)
|
3.1
|
Revenue less pass-through costs
|
2,912
|
(2.3)
|
0.1
|
(1.9)
|
(0.5)
|
|
H1 2024
£m
|
%
reported
|
%
M&A
|
%
FX
|
%
LFL
|
Revenue
|
7,227
|
0.1
|
0.5
|
(3.0)
|
2.6
|
Revenue less pass-through costs
|
5,599
|
(3.6)
|
0.3
|
(2.9)
|
(1.0)
|
Segmental review
Business segments - revenue less pass-through
costs
%
LFL +/(-)
|
Global
Integrated
Agencies
|
Public
Relations
|
Specialist
Agencies
|
Q2
2024
|
(0.6)
|
1.5
|
(2.0)
|
H1
2024
|
(0.7)
|
(0.9)
|
(4.7)
|
Global Integrated
Agencies: GroupM, our media planning and buying business, grew 1.9% in
H1 (Q2: +1.4%), offset by a 2.8% decline at other Global Integrated
Agencies (Q2: -2.4%).
GroupM growth continues to be impacted by 2023 client assignment losses,
which have been partially offset by wins
including Nestlé. Q2 growth of 1.4% slowed sequentially from 2.4% in Q1 as an acceleration to mid-single digit
growth in the US was more than offset by weaker second quarter
trends in Germany, which was lapping a strong quarter last year,
and in China which has been impacted by client losses and a
challenging macro environment.
Ogilvy's performance benefited from
recent new business wins, including Verizon, good growth in CPG
clients and stabilisation of spending by technology clients in Q2.
Hogarth grew well, benefiting from new business wins and
growing demand for its technology and AI-driven
capabilities, as clients seek to produce
more personalised and addressable content. VML
continued to be impacted by the loss of Pfizer creative
assignments, but saw sequential improvement in Q2, benefiting from
recent new business wins and stabilisation of spending by
technology clients. AKQA was impacted by delays in project-related
spend.
Public
Relations: FGS Global continued to
grow strongly in H1 2024, offset by declines at Burson due to the
loss of Pfizer assignments and the impact of macroeconomic
uncertainty on some areas of client spending.
Specialist
Agencies: CMI Media Group, our
specialist healthcare media planning and buying agency, grew well,
offset by declines at Landor and Design Bridge and Partners. Our
smaller specialist agencies continued to be adversely affected by
more cautious client spending and delays in project-based
spending.
Regional segments - revenue less pass-through
costs
%
LFL +/(-)
|
North
America
|
United
Kingdom
|
Western Continental
Europe
|
Rest of
World
|
Q2
2024
|
2.0
|
(5.3)
|
0.3
|
(2.2)
|
H1
2024
|
(1.6)
|
(2.6)
|
1.7
|
(1.4)
|
North America declined by 1.6% in H1
2024, reflecting lower revenues from technology clients and in the
retail and healthcare sectors, reflecting 2023 client losses. This
was partially offset by growth in CPG, telecommunications and
automotive. Within the half, Q2 growth of 2.0% showed a marked
sequential improvement, (Q1: -5.2%) driven
by GroupM and as technology client spend began to
stabilise against easier comparisons.
United Kingdom declined 2.6% in H1,
reflecting a strong comparator (H1 2023: +8.2%). Ogilvy, GroupM and
Hogarth grew in H1, offset by declines in other agencies due to
delays in project-based spending.
In Western Continental Europe,
Germany declined 4.8%, reflecting the impact of macroeconomic
pressures and delays to project-related spend, offset by good
growth in Spain and France as new clients were
onboarded.
The Rest of World declined in H1
2024 as good growth in India (+8.1%) was offset by a decline of
20.3% in China on client assignment losses and persistent
macroeconomic pressures impacting both our
media and creative businesses.
We appointed a new President of WPP
China in February who is working closely with the local CEOs of
each of our agencies, including the new senior leadership team at
GroupM, to bring together the best of our talent and capabilities
in China and build on our leading market position. While we expect
performance to continue to be challenging in the second half of
2024, we are confident these actions will
strengthen our business in what is an important strategic market
for WPP.
Top
five markets - revenue less pass-through costs
%
LFL +/(-)
|
USA
|
UK
|
Germany
|
China
|
India
|
Q2
2024
|
2.6
|
(5.3)
|
(7.4)
|
(24.2)
|
9.1
|
H1
2024
|
(1.4)
|
(2.6)
|
(4.8)
|
(20.3)
|
8.1
|
Client sector review - revenue less pass-through
costs
|
Q2 2024
|
H1 2024
|
H1 2024
|
|
% LFL +/(-)
|
% LFL +/(-)
|
% share, revenue less
pass-through costs11
|
CPG
|
5.1
|
7.2
|
28.3
|
Tech & Digital
Services
|
(1.0)
|
(5.1)
|
17.2
|
Healthcare & Pharma
|
(9.7)
|
(9.0)
|
11.4
|
Automotive
|
3.6
|
1.5
|
10.4
|
Retail
|
(10.7)
|
(9.9)
|
8.8
|
Telecom, Media &
Entertainment
|
5.1
|
5.9
|
6.8
|
Financial Services
|
1.9
|
0.5
|
6.2
|
Other
|
(15.7)
|
(15.3)
|
4.8
|
Travel & Leisure
|
1.9
|
3.0
|
3.7
|
Government, Public Sector &
Non-profit
|
(7.6)
|
(7.2)
|
2.4
|
11. Proportion of WPP revenue less pass-through costs in H1 2024;
table made up of clients representing 78% of WPP total
revenue less pass-through
costs.
Financial results
Unaudited headline income
statement12:
£
million
|
H1 2024
|
H1 2023
|
+/(-) %
reported
|
+/(-) %
LFL
|
|
|
|
|
|
Revenue
|
7,227
|
7,221
|
0.1
|
2.6
|
Revenue less pass-through
costs
|
5,599
|
5,811
|
(3.6)
|
(1.0)
|
Operating profit
|
646
|
666
|
(3.0)
|
0.5
|
Operating profit margin %
|
11.5%
|
11.5%
|
-
|
0.1pt*
|
Income from associates
|
15
|
8
|
87.5
|
|
PBIT
|
661
|
674
|
(1.9)
|
|
Net finance costs
|
(136)
|
(128)
|
(6.3)
|
|
Profit before taxation
|
525
|
546
|
(3.8)
|
|
Tax
|
(146)
|
(148)
|
1.4
|
|
Profit after taxation
|
379
|
398
|
(4.8)
|
|
Non-controlling interests
|
(41)
|
(37)
|
(10.8)
|
|
Profit attributable to
shareholders
|
338
|
361
|
(6.4)
|
|
Diluted EPS
|
30.9p
|
33.1p
|
(6.6)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Reported:
|
|
|
|
|
Revenue
|
7,227
|
7,221
|
0.1
|
|
Operating profit
|
423
|
306
|
38.2
|
|
Profit before taxation
|
338
|
204
|
65.7
|
|
Diluted EPS
|
18.8p
|
10.3p
|
82.5
|
|
*margin points
12 Non-GAAP measures in this table are reconciled in Appendix
4.
Operating profit
Headline operating profit was £646m
(H1 2023: £666m), at a headline operating profit margin of 11.5%
(H1 2023: 11.5%), 0.1 points higher than the prior period on a
constant currency basis. This reflects the decline in revenue less
pass-through costs, cost inflation and investment for future
growth, partially offset by continued cost discipline and
restructuring initiatives.
Total headline operating costs were
down 3.7%, to £4,953m (H1 2023: £5,145m). Staff costs (excluding
incentives) of £3,837m were down 3.3% compared to the prior period
(H1 2023: £3,969m), reflecting higher wage inflation offset by
lower headcount as a result of the actions we have taken to
mitigate the top-line decline in H1 and our restructuring
initiatives. Incentives of £148m were down 14.0% compared to the
prior period (H1 2023: £172m) due to phasing relating to the
weighting of business performance through the year against annual
incentive targets.
Establishment costs of £242m were
down 11.1% compared to the prior period (H1 2023: £272m) driven by
benefits from the campus programme and consolidation of leases. IT
costs of £341m were down 2.6%, personal costs of £103m were down
8.0% driven by savings in travel and entertainment, and other
operating expenses of £282m were up 4.4% driven by higher
commercial costs.
On a like-for-like basis, the
average number of people in the Group in the first half was 113,000
compared to 115,000 in the first half of 2023. The total number of
people as at 30 June 2024 was 111,000 compared to 114,000 as at 30
June 2023.
Headline EBITDA (including IFRS 16 depreciation) for the period was down
1.4% to £756m (H1
2023: £767m).
Reported operating profit
was £423m (H1 2023:
£306m) at a reported operating profit
margin of 5.9% (H1 2023: 4.2%). Reported operating profit includes restructuring
costs of £153m (H1 2023: £267m), amortisation and impairment of acquired
intangible assets and impairment of investments in associates of
£80m (H1 2023: £100m, including £53m of
goodwill impairment).
The restructuring and transformation
costs (£153m) relate to actions set out at
the January Capital Markets Day, primarily the structural cost
saving plan relating to the creation of VML and Burson and the
simplification of GroupM (£72m). These
structural savings are to deliver annualised net cost savings of
c.£125m in 2025, with more than 50% of that saving
now expected to be achieved in 2024 (ahead of the original plan of
40-50%) and an associated restructuring cost of c.£125m in
2024. Also included within restructuring and transformation costs
are the Group's IT transformation projects (£47m) and property costs associated with impairments
prior to 2024 (£22m).
Net
finance costs
Headline net finance costs
of £136m were up
6.3% compared to the prior period (H1 2023:
£128m), primarily due to the impact of
refinancing bonds at higher rates.
Reported net finance costs were
£101m (H1 2023: £103m), including net income of £35m (H1 2023: net income £25m)
relating to the revaluation and retranslation of financial
instruments.
Tax
The headline effective tax rate
(based on headline profit before tax) was 28.0% (H1 2023: 27.0%). The
increase in the headline effective tax rate is driven by changes in
tax rates or tax bases in the markets in which we operate. Given
the Group's geographic mix of profits and the changing
international tax environment, the tax rate is expected to increase
over the next few years.
The reported effective tax rate was
27.2% (H1 2023: 26.9%). The reported effective tax rate is lower than the headline effective tax rate due to gains on
disposal of investments and subsidiaries not being
taxable.
Earnings per share ("EPS") and dividend
Headline diluted EPS was
30.9p (H1 2023: 33.1p), a decrease of
6.6% due to lower headline operating profit
(which includes an adverse FX impact which reduced headline diluted
EPS by 1.5 pence) higher headline net
finance costs and a higher headline effective tax rate.
Reported diluted EPS was 18.8p (H1
2023: 10.3p), an increase of 82.5% due to higher reported operating
profit.
For 2024, the Board is declaring an
interim dividend of 15.0p (2023: 15.0p).
The record date for the interim dividend is
11 October 2024, and the dividend will be payable on
1 November 2024.
Cash flow13
Six months ended (£
million)
|
30 June
2024
|
30 June
2023
|
Headline operating profit
|
646
|
666
|
Income from associates
|
15
|
8
|
Depreciation of property, plant and
equipment
|
81
|
84
|
Amortisation of other
intangibles
|
14
|
9
|
Depreciation of right-of-use
assets
|
110
|
129
|
Headline EBITDA
|
866
|
896
|
Less: income from
associates
|
(15)
|
(8)
|
Repayment of lease liabilities and
related interest
|
(187)
|
(184)
|
Non-cash compensation
|
56
|
76
|
Non-headline cash costs (including
restructuring cost)
|
(144)
|
(114)
|
Capex
|
(107)
|
(104)
|
Working capital
|
(1,056)
|
(1,044)
|
Adjusted operating cash flow
|
(587)
|
(482)
|
%
conversion of Headline operating profit
|
(91)%
|
(72)%
|
Dividends (to minorities)/ from
associates
|
(16)
|
(42)
|
Earnout payments
|
(25)
|
(12)
|
Net interest
|
(49)
|
(48)
|
Cash tax
|
(168)
|
(171)
|
Adjusted free cash flow
|
(845)
|
(755)
|
Disposal proceeds
|
33
|
14
|
Net initial acquisition
payments
|
(29)
|
(203)
|
Dividends
|
-
|
-
|
Share purchases
|
(57)
|
(37)
|
Adjusted net cash flow
|
(898)
|
(981)
|
Adjusted operating cash outflow was
£587m (H1 2023: £482m).
The main driver of the larger cash outflow year on year was an
increase in non headline cash costs to £144m (H1 2023: £114m), mainly driven by costs related to the
previously announced restructuring plan,
including the creation of VML and Burson and the simplification of
GroupM. The working capital outflow was £1,056m,
in line with the prior period (H1 2023: £1,044m) and reflects the
usual seasonality of client activity and timing of payments.
Reported net cash outflow from operating activities (see Note 6)
increased to £540m (H1 2023: £445m outflow).
Adjusted free cash outflow was
£845m, higher than prior period (H1 2023: £755m) due to higher
adjusted operating cash outflow and higher earnout payments, offset
by lower dividends to minorities. Adjusted net cash outflow of
£898m was lower than the prior period (H1 2023: £981m) due to lower
net acquisition payments.
A summary of the Group's unaudited
cash flow statement and notes for the six months to 30 June 2024 is
provided in Appendix 1.
13 Non-GAAP measures in this table are reconciled in Appendix
4.
Balance sheet
As at 30 June 2024, the Group had
total equity of £3,958m (31 December 2023: £3,833m).
Non-current assets of £12,438m
decreased by £241m (31 December 2023: £12,679m), primarily driven
by the amortisation of intangible assets and right-of-use
assets.
Current assets of £13,375m decreased
by £569m (31 December 2023: £13,944m). The decrease principally
relates to trade and other receivables which decreased by £478m to
£7,982m.
Current liabilities of £14,988m
decreased by £1,317m (31 December 2023: £16,305m). The decrease
principally relates to trade and other payables which decreased by
£1,411m, partially offset by a net increase in bank overdrafts and
bonds of £255m.
The decrease in both trade and other
receivables and trade and other payables is primarily due to the
seasonality of client activity and timing of payments, with the
relative movement from December consistent with prior
years.
Non-current liabilities of £6,867m
(31 December 2023: £6,485m) increased by £382m, primarily due to a
£523m increase in bonds to £4,298m, relating to the issuance of two
new bonds in March 2024 (€600m and €650m) offset by a €500m bond
due in March 2025 classified within current liabilities as at 30
June 2024 (31 December 2023: non-current).
Recognised within total equity,
other comprehensive loss of £62m (H1 2023: £210m) for the period
includes a £37m loss (H1 2023: £285m) for foreign exchange
differences on translation of foreign operations, and an
£18m loss (H1 2023: gain
of £78m) on the Group's net
investment hedges.
A summary of the Group's unaudited
balance sheet and selected notes as at 30 June 2024 is provided in
Appendix 1.
Adjusted net debt
As at 30 June 2024, the Group had
cash and cash equivalents of £1.9bn (31 December 2023:
£1.9bn) and total
liquidity, including undrawn credit facilities, of £3.9bn (31
December 2023: £3.8bn). Bonds and bank overdrafts totalled £5.5bn
as at 30 June 2024 (31 December 2023: £4.7bn).
As at 30 June 2024 adjusted net debt
was £3.4bn, against £2.5bn as at 31 December 2023, up
£0.9bn on a reported basis
and at 2024 exchange rates, reflecting seasonal cash outflows in
the first half of the year. Average adjusted net debt in H1 2024
was £3.6bn, compared to £3.6bn in H1 2023, at 2024 exchange
rates.
The average adjusted net debt to
headline EBITDA ratio in the 12 months ended 30 June 2024 is 1.84x
(12 months ended 30 June 2023: 1.68x), which excludes the impact of
IFRS 16.
In February 2024, we refinanced our
five-year Revolving Credit Facility of $2.5bn, with the new
facility running for five years, with two one-year extension
options maturing in February 2029 (excluding options) and with no
financial covenants.
In March 2024 we refinanced $750m of
3.75% bonds due September 2024 and €500m of 1.375% bonds due March
2025 as planned, issuing €600m of 3.625% bonds due September 2029
and €650m of 4.0% bonds due September 2033.
Our bond portfolio as at 30 June
2024 had an average maturity of 5.9 years.
Outlook
Our guidance for 2024 is as
follows:
Like-for-like revenue less pass-through costs growth of -1% to
0% (previously 0-1%)
Headline
operating margin improvement of 20-40bps (excluding the impact of
FX)
|
Other 2024 financial
indications:
• Mergers
and acquisitions will add <0.5% to revenue less pass-through
costs growth (previously 0.5-1.0%)
• FX impact: current
rates (at 2 August 2024) imply a c.2.8% drag on FY 2024 revenues
less pass-through costs, with a 0.1pt drag expected on FY 2024
headline operating margin
• Headline
income from associates and non-controlling interests at similar
levels to 2023
• Net
finance costs of around £295m
• Effective
tax rate (measured as headline tax as a % of headline profit before
tax) of around 28%
• Capex of
around £260m
• Cash
restructuring costs of around £285m
• Working
capital expected to be broadly flat year-on-year
Medium-term targets
In January 2024 we presented an
updated medium-term financial framework including the following
three targets:
• 3%+ LFL
growth in revenue less pass-through costs
• 16-17%
headline operating profit margin
• Adjusted
operating cash flow conversion of 85%+14
14. Adjusted operating cash flow divided by headline operating
profit.
Business sector and regional
analysis