Havas posted a 0.8% decline in net organic revenue for 2024, in line with
previous guidance from the company.
The firm reported its full-year 2024 financial results today, the first time it has released results as a publicly traded company since 2017, when
it was acquired by Vivendi.
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After a year of planning Havas and several other Vivendi subsidiaries were split off into public companies in December.
Havas reported record net
revenue of 2.7 billion euro (approximately $2.9 billion). That figure includes revenue from acquisitions made last year. The organic number is a “like for like” figure that excludes
acquisitions.
Acquisitions contributed 2.5% to the firm's revenue total last year. The company made 6 M&A deals last year and has already made three this
year and company CEO Yannick Bollore said the company would maintain its “dynamic” M&A strategy throughout 2025.
The company reaffirmed previous guidance that it expects to achieve
organic growth this year of 2%+.
Havas, like Stagwell, considers itself a strong “challenger” alternative to the bigger holding companies. “We are excited about
the future and confident in our ability to accelerate in an evolving market,” stated Bollore.
By region, North America reported the largest organic decline last year, 6.6% including a dip
of 3.9% in Q4. The region’s lackluster performance was primarily due to the loss of the Pfizer business early in the year, Havas said, noting that “Havas Media experienced a
challenging year in North America in 2024, while Havas Creative recorded a solid performance.”
Europe grew by 1.2% for the year but was down 2.6% in Q4. The Paris Olympics helped France
deliver a “positive performance.”
APAC showed a modest gain for the year and Latin America was up double digits.
At its annual meeting in May the company said it would offer
several shareholder proposals including a reverse 10-for-1 share split to reduce the number of outstanding ordinary shares.