WPP 2022 Interim Results
WPP reported strong interim results for H1 2022, with revenue reaching £6.8 billion, up 10.2% year-on-year. Revenue less pass-through costs increased by 12.5%, demonstrating broad-based client demand, particularly in technology and healthcare. The company achieved net new billings of $3.4 billion and announced a 20% interim dividend increase to 15.0p. Despite some inflationary pressures and a decline in profit margins, WPP upgraded its full-year growth guidance to 6.0-7.0%. The company remains focused on enhancing its services and has made strategic acquisitions to bolster its capabilities.
- H1 2022 revenue of £6.8 billion, up 10.2% YoY.
- 12.5% increase in revenue less pass-through costs.
- Strong client demand in technology and healthcare sectors with 12% and 7% growth, respectively.
- Net new business of $3.4 billion in H1 2022.
- 20% increase in interim dividend to 15.0p.
- Full-year revenue growth guidance upgraded to 6.0-7.0%.
- Transformation programme on track for £300 million savings.
- Operating profit margin decreased by 0.5 percentage points to 11.6%.
- Increased adjusted net debt to £3.1 billion, up £1.6 billion YoY.
- Exceptional items resulted in a net loss of £100 million.
Strong first half: broad-based growth, sustained demand from clients, transformation programme on track. 2022 growth guidance upgraded again
Key figures
£ million |
H1 2022 |
+/(-) %
|
+/(-) %
|
H1 2021 |
||||
Revenue |
6,755 |
10.2 |
8.7 |
6,133 |
||||
Revenue less pass-through costs |
5,509 |
12.5 |
8.9 |
4,899 |
||||
|
|
|
|
|
||||
Reported: |
|
|
|
|
||||
Operating profit |
539 |
11.4 |
|
484 |
||||
Profit before tax |
419 |
6.1 |
- |
394 |
||||
Diluted EPS (p) |
22.7 |
10.2 |
- |
20.6 |
||||
Dividends per share (p) |
15.0 |
20.0 |
- |
12.5 |
||||
|
|
|
|
|
||||
Headline3: |
|
|
|
|
||||
Operating profit |
639 |
8.2 |
- |
590 |
||||
Operating profit margin |
|
(0.5pt*) |
- |
|
||||
Profit before tax |
562 |
12.0 |
- |
502 |
||||
Diluted EPS (p) |
33.0 |
15.0 |
- |
28.7 |
||||
* Margin points |
H1 and Q2 financial highlights
- Client demand strong across most segments and regions
-
H1 reported revenue up
10.2% , LFL revenue8.7% (Q29.3% ) -
H1 revenue less pass-through costs up
12.5% , LFL revenue less pass-through costs up8.9% (up9.4% on H1 2019) -
Q2 LFL revenue less pass-through costs up
8.3% : US10.4% ,UK 6.2% ,Germany 11.5% ,China (6.1)% (affected by lockdowns),Australia 3.2% -
Strong new business performance:
net new billings in H1$3.4 billion -
H1 headline operating profit margin
11.6% , down 0.5pt on prior year as expected, as a result of higher personnel costs and a return to business travel -
Trade working capital cash outflow
£232 million year-on-year; still expected to be around flat year-on-year at year-end -
Adjusted net debt at
30 June 2022 £3.1 billion , up£1.6 billion year-on-year after£1.1 billion of share buybacks sinceJune 2021
Strategic progress, shareholder returns and outlook
-
Continued recognition of extraordinary creativity:
WPP awarded most creative company at Cannes Lions for second year running -
Faster growth areas of experience, commerce and technology around
39% of revenue less pass-through costs in Global Integrated Agencies ex-GroupM in H1 -
Strong performance by industry sector: H1 LFL revenue less pass-through costs growth
12% in Technology,7% in CPG and7% in Healthcare - Investing for growth: enhancing our data capabilities through Choreograph and launch of Everymile, direct-to-consumer ecommerce offer
-
Focused M&A: acquisition of Village Marketing to accelerate creator economy growth and
Bower House Digital , a leading marketing technology agency -
Further simplification to enhance offer to clients: creation of
EssenceMediacom and Design Bridge and Partners -
Transformation programme on track to deliver expected
£300 million of annual savings this year over a 2019 base -
£637 million share buybacks in H1, total of£800 million to be completed in 2022; 15.0p 2022 interim dividend declared, +20% -
Full year 2022 LFL revenue less pass-through costs growth now expected to be 6.0
-7.0% ; headline operating profit margin up around 50 bps
“We have enjoyed a strong first half, with broad-based growth across our creative, media and public relations businesses. This reflects the improved competitive position of our creative businesses, with their growing capabilities in commerce, experience and technology, our continued strength in media and the resurgence in demand for strategic communications advice from our public relations agencies.
“Our services are business-critical – driving growth, building brands, innovating and helping clients navigate an increasingly complex marketing environment. As major advertisers increasingly look to integrate their marketing investments, we are well positioned to serve the world’s largest companies, demonstrated by our success with Coca-Cola, which we are now onboarding at pace. The second quarter saw significant assignment wins from Audi, Audible, Danone and Nationwide.
“Our commitment to creativity was recognised at Cannes Lions in June where
“Our clients are continuing to invest in WPP’s services, which reflects our attractive industry exposure in technology and healthcare, our broad global footprint, and the importance of what we do for their businesses. The actions we have taken over the last four years leave
To access WPP’s 2022 Interim Results financial tables, please visit www.wpp.com/investors
First half overview
Market environment
The market has continued to be strong in the first half of the year, with many sectors seeing significant growth in advertising spend. GroupM now expects global advertising to grow by
GroupM expects
By geography, the US advertising market is expected to remain robust, growing by
Performance and progress
Revenue in the first half was
We have seen good momentum in the first half of the year, with LFL growth in revenue less pass-through costs across most sectors and most major markets. On a three-year basis LFL revenue less pass-through costs is up
Client demand remains healthy across all services. Revenue less pass-through costs from higher-growth areas of our offer in experience, commerce and technology was
Clients and partners
In terms of client sector performance, we have seen good growth in the technology, CPG and healthcare & pharma sectors, which together represent around
We have won
In addition, we have developed new, and expanded existing, partnerships with global technology companies. During the period we announced a partnership with Epic Games, the company behind Fortnite and Unreal Engine, to help
Creativity and awards
While data and technology play an increasingly important role in modern marketing, creativity is still at the heart of our work, because clients understand that the most effective campaigns start with an insight or idea. We are committed to maintaining our differentiation through sustained investment in creative talent, and integrating creativity with our experience, commerce and technology expertise.
In the 2022 WARC rankings, Ogilvy also topped the creativity ranking and placed second for effectiveness, becoming the only agency to secure top rankings in both categories and reflecting the breadth of its offer. WARC also named Mindshare the number one media agency network for the third consecutive year.
Our media business, GroupM, retained its ranking as the world’s largest media agency group, as calculated by COMvergence in their 2021 full year report. Once again, GroupM ranked number one in APAC and EMEA and improved to joint second place in
Investment for growth
During the first half we have invested in strategically important capabilities, continuing our focused approach to acquisitions. We announced the acquisitions of Village Marketing, the industry leader in influencer marketing in
We have invested organically in new platforms to provide a future-facing offer to clients and innovate for the long term. The main areas of our investment are Choreograph, to accelerate our data capabilities; the launch of Everymile, our commerce-as-a-service platform; and our market-leading programmatic and connected TV businesses within GroupM Nexus. In addition, we launched
Transformation programme
We continue to make good progress on our transformation plan, designed to achieve
In property, we now have around 50,000 people occupying 34 campuses, having opened new campuses in
We are continuing to consolidate and modernise the tools used by our people, predominantly through the roll-out of ERP systems Workday and Maconomy. We are live with Workday in
In our broader IT transformation, we have moved nearly 1,000 people from agency roles into
In procurement, we hosted a supplier day for 30 key suppliers to communicate our procurement strategy and align incentives, driving incremental savings. We are implementing a new procurement operating model leveraging our global scale, aligned around categories and consolidating suppliers.
We have also merged more of our businesses to simplify our organisation and respond to our clients’ needs. Within GroupM we announced the merger of Essence and MediaCom to form EssenceMediacom and the formation of Nexus which brings together Finecast, Xaxis and GroupM Services to form one of the world’s leading media performance organisations. Last month we announced the merger of our specialist design agencies, Design Bridge and Superunion to create a single leading design company,
Finally, we have made progress in streamlining our operating model, reducing statutory entities by approximately a further 150 in the first half of the year.
Purpose and ESG
People
We have continued to invest in our people strategy in order to attract, retain and grow top talent and ensure that we are an employer of choice for all. We recently launched the
We are committed to our
Planet
Last year we announced our new commitments to reduce carbon emissions from our own operations to net zero by 2025 and across our supply chain by 2030. Our net zero pledges are backed by equally ambitious science-based reduction targets, which have been verified by the Science-Based Targets initiative. We have committed to reducing our absolute Scope 1 and 2 emissions by at least
During the half,
Media accounts for more than half of WPP’s supply chain emissions. In July GroupM launched a framework to measure and reduce ad-based carbon emissions, an important first step to standardise and accelerate carbon reduction across different media channels.
Clients
Our clients are bringing purpose and sustainability to the forefront of their brand strategies. Many of our successes at the Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity were in recognition of purpose-driven work, including a Titanium Grand Prix for Cadbury work by Ogilvy and Wavemaker, which uses personalised adverts for local businesses hit by COVID-19; and a
Communities
Our colleagues in
2022 guidance
Performance in the first half of 2022 has been strong, and we expect continued growth in the second half. As a result, we are updating our guidance for 2022 as follows:
-
Organic growth (defined as like-for-like revenue less pass-through costs growth) of 6.0
-7.0% (previously 5.5-6.5% ) - Headline operating profit margin up around 50 bps, reflecting greater top-line momentum offset by inflationary cost pressures, the impact of Chinese lockdowns and investment in growth areas including Choreograph and Everymile
-
Effective tax rate (measured as headline tax as a % of headline profit before tax) of around
25.5% -
Capex
£350 -400 million with around£100 million relating to ERP system deployment previously included in capex guidance now included in restructuring costs - Trade working capital expected to be flat year-on-year
-
Current foreign exchange rates imply around a
4.5% tailwind to reported revenue less pass-through costs from the movement in sterling year-on-year -
We also anticipate mergers and acquisitions will add around
0.3% to revenue less pass-through costs growth, net of the divestment of our Russian operations -
We expect to execute around
£800 million of share buybacks in 2022, of which£637 million has already been completed
Medium-term guidance
We remain confident in our ability to deliver annual revenue less pass-through costs growth of 3
We will provide guidance for the 2023 year at our 2022 preliminary results announcement in
Financial results
Unaudited headline income statement:
Six months ended (£ million) |
30 June
|
30 June
|
+/(-) %
|
+/(-) % LFL |
||||
|
|
|
|
|
||||
Revenue |
6,755 |
6,133 |
10.2 |
8.7 |
||||
Revenue less pass-through costs |
5,509 |
4,899 |
12.5 |
8.9 |
||||
Operating profit |
639 |
590 |
8.2 |
|
||||
Operating profit margin % |
|
|
(0.5)pt |
|
||||
Income from associates |
12 |
29 |
(56.5) |
|
||||
PBIT |
651 |
619 |
5.3 |
|
||||
Net finance costs |
(89) |
(117) |
23.7 |
|
||||
Profit before tax |
562 |
502 |
12.0 |
|
||||
Tax |
(143) |
(115) |
(25.2) |
|
||||
Profit after tax |
419 |
387 |
8.2 |
|
||||
Non-controlling interests |
(43) |
(34) |
(24.9) |
|
||||
Profit attributable to shareholders |
376 |
353 |
6.5 |
|
||||
Diluted EPS |
33.0p |
28.7p |
15.0 |
|
Reconciliation of operating profit to headline operating profit:
Six months ended (£ million) |
|
|
||
|
|
|
||
Operating profit |
539 |
484 |
||
Amortisation and impairment of acquired intangible assets |
31 |
30 |
||
Losses on disposal of investments and subsidiaries |
48 |
1 |
||
Gains on remeasurement of equity interests arising from a change in scope of ownership |
(60) |
- |
||
Litigation settlement |
- |
22 |
||
Restructuring and transformation costs |
75 |
34 |
||
Restructuring costs in relation to COVID-19 |
6 |
19 |
||
Headline operating profit |
639 |
590 |
Reported billings were
Reported revenue from continuing operations was up
Reported revenue less pass-through costs was up
Business sector review
Revenue analysis
|
Q2 |
|
H1 |
|||||||||||
|
£m |
|
+/(-) %
|
|
+/(-) %
|
|
|
|
£m |
|
+/(-) %
|
|
+/(-) %
|
|
Global Int. Agencies |
3,111 |
13.0 |
10.2 |
|
5,701 |
9.6 |
9.3 |
|||||||
Public Relations |
302 |
28.0 |
9.0 |
|
572 |
27.2 |
11.2 |
|||||||
Specialist Agencies |
251 |
1.5 |
(0.3) |
|
482 |
0.5 |
0.2 |
|||||||
|
3,664 |
13.3 |
9.3 |
|
6,755 |
10.2 |
8.7 |
Prior year figures have been re-presented to reflect the reallocation of a number of businesses between Global Integrated Agencies and Specialist Agencies. This increases Global Integrated Agencies’ Q2 and H1 2021 revenue by
Revenue less pass-through costs analysis
|
Q2 |
|
H1 |
|||||||||||
|
£m |
|
+/(-) %
|
|
+/(-) %
|
|
|
|
£m |
|
+/(-) %
|
|
+/(-) %
|
|
Global Int. Agencies |
2,432 |
13.1 |
8.2 |
|
4,538 |
10.8 |
8.4 |
|||||||
Public Relations |
283 |
26.7 |
7.3 |
|
545 |
27.0 |
10.5 |
|||||||
Specialist Agencies |
220 |
14.6 |
10.9 |
|
426 |
14.3 |
11.9 |
|||||||
|
2,935 |
14.4 |
8.3 |
|
5,509 |
12.5 |
8.9 |
Prior year figures have been re-presented to reflect the reallocation of a number of businesses between Global Integrated Agencies and Specialist Agencies. This increases Global Integrated Agencies’ Q2 and H1 2021 revenue less pass-through costs by
Headline operating profit analysis
£ million |
2022 |
|
% margin* |
|
2021 |
|
% margin* |
|
Global Int. Agencies |
507 |
11.2 |
489 |
11.9 |
||||
Public Relations |
83 |
15.2 |
63 |
14.8 |
||||
Specialist Agencies |
49 |
11.4 |
38 |
10.3 |
||||
|
639 |
11.6 |
590 |
12.1 |
||||
* Headline operating profit as a percentage of revenue less pass-through costs |
Prior year figures have been re-presented to reflect the reallocation of a number of businesses between Global Integrated Agencies and Specialist Agencies. This increases Global Integrated Agencies’ H1 2021 headline operating profit by
Global Integrated Agencies like-for-like revenue less pass-through costs was up
Public Relations like-for-like revenue less pass-through costs was up
Specialist Agencies like-for-like revenue less pass-through costs was up
Regional review
Revenue analysis
|
Q2 |
|
H1 |
|||||||||||
|
£m |
|
%
|
|
%
|
|
|
|
£m |
|
%
|
|
%
|
|
|
1,399 |
24.9 |
12.4 |
|
2,586 |
18.4 |
10.9 |
|||||||
|
495 |
0.3 |
1.0 |
|
956 |
3.1 |
3.2 |
|||||||
W Cont. |
731 |
0.4 |
3.7 |
|
1,352 |
0.9 |
5.3 |
|||||||
AP, LA, AME, CEE6 |
1,039 |
16.3 |
14.8 |
|
1,861 |
10.7 |
11.8 |
|||||||
|
3,664 |
13.3 |
9.3 |
|
6,755 |
10.2 |
8.7 |
Revenue less pass-through costs analysis
|
Q2 |
|
H1 |
|||||||||||
|
£m |
|
%
|
|
%
|
|
|
|
£m |
|
%
|
|
%
|
|
|
1,173 |
26.0 |
10.2 |
|
2,189 |
20.4 |
9.5 |
|||||||
|
385 |
7.2 |
6.2 |
|
737 |
8.4 |
7.1 |
|||||||
W Cont. |
579 |
3.6 |
6.6 |
|
1,086 |
3.4 |
7.7 |
|||||||
AP, LA, AME, CEE |
798 |
11.4 |
8.0 |
|
1,497 |
10.8 |
9.8 |
|||||||
|
2,935 |
14.4 |
8.3 |
|
5,509 |
12.5 |
8.9 |
Headline operating profit analysis
£ million |
2022 |
|
% margin* |
|
2021 |
|
% margin* |
|
|
300 |
13.7 |
271 |
14.9 |
||||
|
67 |
9.1 |
83 |
12.3 |
||||
W Cont. |
99 |
9.1 |
104 |
9.9 |
||||
AP, LA, AME, CEE |
173 |
11.6 |
132 |
9.7 |
||||
|
639 |
11.6 |
590 |
12.1 |
||||
* Headline operating profit as a percentage of revenue less pass-through costs |
Western Continental Europe like-for-like revenue less pass-through costs was up
In
Operating profitability
Reported profit before tax was
Reported profit after tax was
Headline EBITDA (including IFRS 16 depreciation) for the first half was up
Headline operating profit margin was down 50 basis points to
The Group’s headline operating profit is net of
On a like-for-like basis, the average number of people in the Group in the first half was 113,000 compared to 102,000 in the first half of 2021. The total number of people as at
Exceptional items
The Group incurred a net exceptional loss of
Interest and taxes
Net finance costs (excluding the revaluation of financial instruments) were
The headline tax rate (based on headline profit before tax) was
Earnings and dividend
Headline profit before tax was up
Profits attributable to share owners were
Headline diluted earnings per share from continuing operations rose by
For 2022, the Board is declaring an interim dividend of 15.0p, an increase of
Further details of WPP’s financial performance are provided in Appendix 1.
Cash flow highlights
Six months ended (£ million) |
|
|
||
Operating profit |
539 |
484 |
||
Depreciation and amortisation |
255 |
250 |
||
Impairments and investment write-downs |
8 |
8 |
||
Lease payments (inc interest) |
(190) |
(202) |
||
Non-cash compensation |
67 |
44 |
||
Net interest paid |
(60) |
(65) |
||
Tax paid |
(163) |
(163) |
||
Capex |
(117) |
(138) |
||
Earnout payments |
(63) |
(14) |
||
Other |
(9) |
(44) |
||
Trade working capital |
(1,015) |
(464) |
||
Other receivables, payables and provisions |
(726) |
(41) |
||
Free cash flow |
(1,474) |
(345) |
||
Disposal proceeds |
34 |
43 |
||
Net initial acquisition payments |
(46) |
(252) |
||
Share purchases |
(681) |
(298) |
||
Net cash flow |
(2,167) |
(852) |
Net cash outflow for the first half was
Balance sheet highlights
As at
We spent
Our bond portfolio at
The average adjusted net debt to EBITDA ratio in the 12 months to
A summary of the Group’s unaudited balance sheet and notes as at
________________________________ | |
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. Both periods exclude results from |
3 |
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. Where required, details of how these have been arrived at are shown in Appendix 2. |
4 |
Excluding the impact of US political advertising |
5 |
For designated clients, representing approximately |
6 |
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