WPP Group PLC ADR (WPPGY)
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Sir Martin Sorrell, Director/CEO
27 Farm Street
London, W1J 5RJ
EN
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Phone: 44 2074082204
Fax: 44 2074936819
Portfolio.com Overview
WHERE THEY CAME FROM
The marketing field is infamous for volatility, egos, and cutthroat competition, and WPP’s C.E.O., Martin Sorrell, stands out from the spirited throng on all three counts. In fact, industry giant WPP can’t even be discussed without first mentioning Sir Martin. The firm was created more than 20 years ago, when Sorrell—knighted in 2000—was looking for a public entity, essentially a shell company, upon which to build an empire. In 1985 (a year before his rival Omnicom consolidated), he found it in Wire and Plastic Products, a British manufacturer of wire baskets. Thus began one of the most aggressive communications and marketing-services holding companies in existence.
WHAT THEY DO
WPP is the poster child of corporate A.D.D., with 98,000 employees in 2,000-plus offices in 106 countries. Its public face is its group of advertising agencies, among them JWT, Ogilvy & Mather Worldwide, Grey Worldwide, and Young & Rubicam. But it also owns media-investment management firms; public relations shops (Burson-Marsteller and Ogilvy Public Relations Worldwide); branding companies (Landor and Enterprise IG); direct promotion and retail-marketing firms (Wunderman and OgilvyAction); information and consultancy businesses (with the Kantar Group as parent); health-care communications organizations (Sudler & Hennessey and Grey Healthcare Group); and other digital and specialist-communication companies.
WHAT THEY GOT RIGHT
WPP sealed the biggest deal in agency history when it bought Y&R for $4.7 billion in 2000. The purchase was the high point in a shopping spree that started when Sorrell completed the first-ever hostile takeover in marketing-industry history by acquiring the much larger J. Walter Thompson Group for $566 million in 1987. He did it again in 1989, buying Ogilvy & Mather for $864 million. In 2005, the year WPP acquired Grey Global Group for $1.5 billion, it earned $10 billion in overall revenue from its properties.
Whether you know it or not, you’ve been influenced by WPP. Bought Pantene or Pringles lately? WPP’s marketing-communications network, Grey Global Group, might have used its ads to persuade you to do so. Sipped Dr Pepper? That could have been WPP’s Y&R influence. Thousands of television and radio commercials, print ads, billboards, and more come from advertising agencies owned by WPP.
WHAT THEY GOT WRONG
Sir Martin is known as the industry ogre (as well as other, unprintable epithets) for gobbling up other companies. But besides damaging his reputation, Sorrell’s shopping sprees have been expensive for his firm. Unfortunately for WPP, its big buys in the late ’80s were followed by an economic recession. The company’s market value dropped dramatically in the early 1990s, and the organization came close to collapsing. As Sorrell was forced to hunker down and pay off debt, WPP lost its standing as marketing’s largest player. By 2000, though, Sorrell was back in the game in a big way with the Y&R purchase, and he profited mightily from the dotcom boom. The ensuing bust delivered more hard times, with the company’s stock price dropping $70 a share between 2000 and 2003.
WHAT’S NEXT
Sorrell’s appetite may become increasingly exotic: WPP is looking to expand its interests in Asia, Africa, Russia, and Latin America over the next decade.—Willow Duttge
The marketing field is infamous for volatility, egos, and cutthroat competition, and WPP’s C.E.O., Martin Sorrell, stands out from the spirited throng on all three counts. In fact, industry giant WPP can’t even be discussed without first mentioning Sir Martin. The firm was created more than 20 years ago, when Sorrell—knighted in 2000—was looking for a public entity, essentially a shell company, upon which to build an empire. In 1985 (a year before his rival Omnicom consolidated), he found it in Wire and Plastic Products, a British manufacturer of wire baskets. Thus began one of the most aggressive communications and marketing-services holding companies in existence.
WHAT THEY DO
WPP is the poster child of corporate A.D.D., with 98,000 employees in 2,000-plus offices in 106 countries. Its public face is its group of advertising agencies, among them JWT, Ogilvy & Mather Worldwide, Grey Worldwide, and Young & Rubicam. But it also owns media-investment management firms; public relations shops (Burson-Marsteller and Ogilvy Public Relations Worldwide); branding companies (Landor and Enterprise IG); direct promotion and retail-marketing firms (Wunderman and OgilvyAction); information and consultancy businesses (with the Kantar Group as parent); health-care communications organizations (Sudler & Hennessey and Grey Healthcare Group); and other digital and specialist-communication companies.
WHAT THEY GOT RIGHT
WPP sealed the biggest deal in agency history when it bought Y&R for $4.7 billion in 2000. The purchase was the high point in a shopping spree that started when Sorrell completed the first-ever hostile takeover in marketing-industry history by acquiring the much larger J. Walter Thompson Group for $566 million in 1987. He did it again in 1989, buying Ogilvy & Mather for $864 million. In 2005, the year WPP acquired Grey Global Group for $1.5 billion, it earned $10 billion in overall revenue from its properties.
Whether you know it or not, you’ve been influenced by WPP. Bought Pantene or Pringles lately? WPP’s marketing-communications network, Grey Global Group, might have used its ads to persuade you to do so. Sipped Dr Pepper? That could have been WPP’s Y&R influence. Thousands of television and radio commercials, print ads, billboards, and more come from advertising agencies owned by WPP.
WHAT THEY GOT WRONG
Sir Martin is known as the industry ogre (as well as other, unprintable epithets) for gobbling up other companies. But besides damaging his reputation, Sorrell’s shopping sprees have been expensive for his firm. Unfortunately for WPP, its big buys in the late ’80s were followed by an economic recession. The company’s market value dropped dramatically in the early 1990s, and the organization came close to collapsing. As Sorrell was forced to hunker down and pay off debt, WPP lost its standing as marketing’s largest player. By 2000, though, Sorrell was back in the game in a big way with the Y&R purchase, and he profited mightily from the dotcom boom. The ensuing bust delivered more hard times, with the company’s stock price dropping $70 a share between 2000 and 2003.
WHAT’S NEXT
Sorrell’s appetite may become increasingly exotic: WPP is looking to expand its interests in Asia, Africa, Russia, and Latin America over the next decade.—Willow Duttge
Portfolio Articles
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Nov 01 2007
News Feeds
-
GfK drops its takeover bid for Taylor Nelson
AP
Aug 27 2008
-
Earnings roundup: Rentokil, WPP
AP
Aug 22 2008
-
UK ad company WPP first-half profit up 14 percent
AP
Aug 22 2008
Press Releases
-
Stolichnaya Awards Account to Ogilvy New York Sep-02-2008, 12:21PM EDT
-
Neal Prescott Joins WPP Digital to Launch Deliver, a Group-Wide Digital Production Capability Aug-28-2008, 08:00AM EDT
-
WPP 2008 Interim Results Aug-22-2008, 07:00AM EDT
-
Alain Groenendaal Joins Winglatino as President and CEO Aug-21-2008, 11:50AM EDT
News From Around the Web
News
-
Doner Takes Over Marketing For Amazon
(Response Magazine)Sep 05 2008 -
GfK Pulls Out of Bid for TNS
(Response Magazine)Sep 05 2008 -
$275 Mil. Discover Biz to MediaCom
(Adweek)Sep 04 2008 -
Ogilvy Wins Stoli's Global Creative
(Brandweek)Sep 04 2008 -
WPP Extends TNS Deadline
(Adweek)Sep 02 2008 -
Sep 01 2008
-
Doner to Take Over as Amazon Agency
(Advertising Age)Aug 28 2008 -
GfK Gives Up Quest to Acquire Taylor Nelson Sofres
(Advertising Age)Aug 27 2008 -
Microsoft in Talks With WPP
(Red Herring)Aug 25 2008 -
Three global ad firms team up to modernize sales
(Computerworld)Aug 15 2008
Employees
Number of Employees: 90,182
Revenue per Employee: $152,260
Top Executives
Board of Directors
Mark Read, Director/Other Corporate Officer
Philip Lader, Chairman of the Board/Director
Stanley (Bud) Morten, Director
Financials
Quarterly
Annual
| Income Statement | 06/2008 | 08/2007 | 06/2007 | 09/2006 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sales | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| Gross Operating Profit | 3.34 Bil. | 2.87 Bil. | 2.88 Bil. | 2.49 Bil. |
| Operating Income before D & A (EBITDA) | 3.34 Bil. | 2.87 Bil. | 2.88 Bil. | 2.49 Bil. |
| Total Income Before Interest Expenses (EBIT) | 3.34 Bil. | 2.87 Bil. | 2.88 Bil. | 2.49 Bil. |
| Total Net Income | 290.45 Mil. | 199.91 Mil. | 244.38 Mil. | 169.62 Mil. |
| Basic EPS, Total | 1.23 | 0.75 | 1.02 | 0 |
| Diluted EPS, Total | 1.18 | 0.75 | 0.99 | 0 |
| BALANCE STATEMENT | 06/2008 | 08/2007 | 06/2007 | 09/2006 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cash and Equivalents | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| Total Assets | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| Total Liabilities | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| Total Capitalization | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| Cash Flow | 06/2008 | 08/2007 | 06/2007 | 09/2006 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Net Cash From Continuing Operations | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| Net Cash From Investing Activities | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| Net Cash From Financing Activities | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| Net Change in Cash & Cash Equivalents | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| Income Statement | 2008 | 2007 | 2006 | 2005 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sales | 299.35 Mil. | 217.21 Mil. | 161.02 Mil. | 240.03 Mil. |
| Gross Operating Profit | 11.98 Bil. | 11.35 Bil. | 9.08 Bil. | 8 Bil. |
| Operating Income before D & A (EBITDA) | 1.96 Bil. | 1.82 Bil. | 1.38 Bil. | 1.26 Bil. |
| Total Income Before Interest Expenses (EBIT) | 1.92 Bil. | 1.73 Bil. | 1.32 Bil. | 1.01 Bil. |
| Total Net Income | 924.86 Mil. | 853.56 Mil. | 626.02 Mil. | 560.4 Mil. |
| Basic EPS, Total | 3.93 | 3.55 | 2.61 | 2.46 |
| Diluted EPS, Total | 3.77 | 3.45 | 2.55 | 2.4 |
| BALANCE STATEMENT | 2008 | 2007 | 2006 | 2005 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cash and Equivalents | 4.05 Bil. | 3.26 Bil. | 1.92 Bil. | 2.63 Bil. |
| Total Assets | 17 Bil. | 13.64 Bil. | 10.65 Bil. | 9.2 Bil. |
| Total Liabilities | 19.66 Bil. | 15.83 Bil. | 12.63 Bil. | 10.01 Bil. |
| Total Capitalization | 11.34 Bil. | 9.88 Bil. | 9.23 Bil. | 10.03 Bil. |
| Cash Flow | 2008 | 2007 | 2006 | 2005 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Net Cash From Continuing Operations | 1.77 Bil. | 1.3 Bil. | 1.44 Bil. | 1.02 Bil. |
| Net Cash From Investing Activities | -1.66 Bil. | -739.76 Mil. | -1.16 Bil. | -565.96 Mil. |
| Net Cash From Financing Activities | -134.59 Mil. | 85.98 Mil. | -1.47 Bil. | 247.13 Mil. |
| Net Change in Cash & Cash Equivalents | 209.23 Mil. | 543.12 Mil. | -1.04 Bil. | 619.26 Mil. |
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