In what could be a case of digital video ad marketplace role reversal, TV is taking share from digital, albeit over-the-top.
That’s the conclusion of equities researchers at
BMO Capital Markets, based on briefings with key players in the advanced TV and video ad markets.
While conventional TV advertising remains resilient -- and if anything, appears to
be propped up by Madison Avenue’s legacy view of the medium -- the BMO analysts report the over-the-top video advertising marketplace is accelerating rapidly.
It is taking share from
both desktop and mobile
Citing estimates from Innovid, OTT video ad spending is on track to expand 300% and will account for roughly 20% of all video ad dollars served by the
company this year.
“We believe OTT marks an opportunity for both traditional TV players (particularly as products featuring their networks like Sling TV, DirectTV Now, YouTube
TV and Hulu with Live TV get early traction), as well as pure-play digital ones, like YouTube, as they are native to the underlying digital experience,” the BMO analysts write in a note sent to
investors.
The note points out YouTube’s share of the market declined “due to the advertiser protest,” especially among large brands.
“There was no
clear-cut trend as some large advertisers cut spending completely, some pulled back and have now returned, and some spent more as competitors pulled spending,” the analysts wrote.
They do
not expect any long-term impact from the protests, because of YouTube’s “established relationships with large marketers that are now regularly in the hundreds of millions.”
