
Omnicom reported a 27% drop in net income for the
fourth quarter to $254.4 million on a 1.5% dip in revenue to $4.2 billion. Organic revenue growth for the period was 1.6%.
For the full year, net income was down 5.2% to $1.09 billion on
a 0.9% revenue decline to $15.3 billion. Full-year organic revenue growth was 3%.
The company said the net income decline was the result of the new tax law passed in December. Profit
would have grown for the year and the fourth quarter if the law had not been enacted, per the company.
Going forward, however, company CEO John Wren told analysts on an earnings call
that the firm would benefit from lower corporate tax rates imposed by the new law. Consumer spending may also rise, leading to increased efforts by marketers to capture those dollars.
Revenues were impacted partly by a decrease in acquisition revenue and the disposal of certain assets. The firm’s healthcare segment was also down, while the company’s branding
operation “began to stabilize” by the end of the year, Wren told analysts.
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North America posted an organic revenue decline of 0.8% in the fourth quarter and was up 0.6% for
the full year. Wren noted that client project work, often key to determining the strength of the fourth quarter, was softer than expected this year.
Wren also noted that the firm’s
programmatic business, Accuen has been fully embedded in the company’s three big media shops — OMD, PHD and Hearts & Science. That transition also impacted revenues, per Wren, who
noted some clients are opting out of the company’s performance-based programmatic offering.
U.S. programmatic revenues were $17 million less in the fourth quarter versus the prior-year
period.
The Euro markets organic growth were up a combined 8.2% in the fourth quarter and 8% for the full year, while the UK was down less than a percentage point in the fourth quarter
and up 5.1% for the full year.
The Asia-Pacific region showed growth of almost 2% in the fourth quarter and was up 5.8% for the year. Latin America was down slightly in the fourth
quarter and up 0.6% year-over-year.
Wren noted that while new business activity was sluggish during the first nine months of the year, a number of new wins were recorded in the fourth
quarter, the full impact of which will hit this year. Those wins include HP, more McDonald’s business, Intuit, more State Farm business and an unidentified pharma company.
Operating
profit was up 3% in the fourth quarter and up 2.5% for the year to nearly $2.1 billion.
Current guidance for 2018 is organic growth of between 2% and 3%.