Sir Martin Sorrell warns of 'grey swan' troubles ahead in advertising slowdown

Gideon Spanier
Friday 26 October 2012 02:17 BST
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WPP, the world's biggest advertising group, has raised fresh fears of a global economic slowdown as it warned of a marked change in behaviour by clients since September.

Sir Martin Sorrell, WPP's chief executive, said it was clear that sentiment had worsened, pointing to big cuts by the car maker Ford, which axed 1,300 UK jobs yesterday, and weak results by the Swiss banking giant Credit Suisse.

Sir Martin explained he has spoken to the bosses of more than two dozen major multi-nationals in recent weeks and "people have just become very, very cautious".

He said: "We don't know why. Most clients saw a significant change in September. It could be that people came back from their holidays in August and looked at the rest of the year and were cautious."

The WPP chief added that it was "correct" to describe this as a global slowdown. He said four macroeconomic factors, which he called "four grey swans", were affecting client behaviour: the eurozone crisis, volatility in the Middle East, a soft landing for the Chinese economy, and the US fiscal deficit.

The swan reference comes from the academic Nassim Nicholas Taleb's book The Black Swan, in which he talked about known factors called "grey swans" and rare, unpredictable factors such as a "black swan".

WPP's own sales growth ground to a halt last month, after increasing by 3 per cent in July and August and by 3.6 per cent during the first half of the year.

"September was flat," said Sir Martin, describing it as "significantly different from July and August".

Overall, group sales rose 1.9 per cent in the quarter to £2.5bn. The UK performed well, jumping 4.7 per cent, and that was not only because of the Olympic Games in London. Asia and Latin America were also strong. But North America fell by 0.4 per cent and Western Europe shrank 2.1 per cent.

As a result, WPP has cut its revenue and profit forecast for the rest of the year.

WPP's shares were the third worst fallers on the FTSE 100, dropping by 2.3 per cent or 18.5p to 789.5p.

The advertising group's slowdown is a particular worry for the City because marketing is seen as a barometer of the wider economy and WPP's clients include many of the world's biggest companies, including HSBC, Ford, Vodafone and News Corporation.

Sir Martin warned: "This softness or change that took place in September comes at the worst time," just as clients set their marketing budgets for 2013.

He said the biggest concern among clients was now the ailing state of the US economy rather than the eurozone.

"Business to a man and woman is in favour of [Mitt] Romney, but the electorate may ultimately favour Obama," he said.

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