Sorrell’s S4 Capital says it is maintaining momentum

Third quarter marked by disappointing results from major platforms including Alphabet’s Google and Facebook’s Meta.

Martin Sorrell said his digital ad group S4 Capital had maintained momentum in a third quarter marked by disappointing results from major platforms including Alphabet’s Google and Meta’s Facebook. Photograph: Eric Gaillard/Reuters
Martin Sorrell said his digital ad group S4 Capital had maintained momentum in a third quarter marked by disappointing results from major platforms including Alphabet’s Google and Meta’s Facebook. Photograph: Eric Gaillard/Reuters

Martin Sorrell said his digital ad group S4 Capital had maintained momentum in a third quarter marked by disappointing results from major platforms including Alphabet’s Google and Meta’s Facebook.

“The prospects for Alphabet, Meta, Amazon in particular, and for TikTok are not as good as they were - there has been a slowing of growth - but it continues to be pretty strong,” he said on Monday.

“And then the other side of it, in technology services and digital transformation, most of the prognostications of that are around growth of 20 to 25 per cent over the next four or five years, so we think we’re well positioned to take advantage of both those things.”

S4, launched by Mr Sorrell in 2018 after he left the world’s biggest ad holding group WPP, said like-for-like gross profit/net revenue rose more than 29 per cent in the three months to end-September, keeping it on track for growth of 25 per cent for the year.

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It said it would produce operational core earnings of about £120 million pounds (€137 million) this year, in line with guidance cut in July, reflecting the costs of a hiring spree.

Shares in S4 rose 9 per cent to 229 pence in early deals, the highest level since the downgrade in the summer.

Mr Sorrell said Twitter and Snap, which each account for around 1 per cent of the digital ad market, were not a good indicator for the sector.

He said advertisers were pausing spending on Twitter pending clarity on how new owner Elon Musk would moderate content.

Mr Musk had three main problems, Mr Sorrell said, namely ad revenue and content moderation, the loss of some good people in the recent layoffs and the opportunity costs for his other ventures like Tesla and SpaceX.

"But it doesn't pay to bet against him," he said. "So I think he'll get it right in the end, but it's going to be very bumpy.

“At the moment most clients are suspending their activities because they’re worried about extreme content and content moderation on the site.” - Reuters

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