The New Zealand Herald

Re-tuning

TVNZ result hit by weaker ad revenue

- Jonathan Underhill

Television New Zealand posted a 6.2 per cent decline in underlying firsthalf earnings as advertisin­g revenue fell faster than operating costs, which the state-owned broadcaste­r said was a creditable performanc­e in a declining TV market.

Earnings before interest, tax, depreciati­on, amortisati­on and changes in the value of financial instrument­s fell to $26.7 million from $28.5m a year earlier, the Aucklandba­sed company said.

Advertisin­g revenue fell 5 per cent, or about $8.7m, to $159m while operating expenses dropped 5.4 per cent, or $8.1m, to $142m.

Chief executive Kevin Kenrick said TVNZ had outperform­ed the broader TV market by increasing its audience and revenue share in what he said was a period of unpreceden­ted change for the media industry. New Zealand’s television advertisin­g revenue market fell by 8.4 per cent in the first half.

The first-half performanc­e gave him confidence TVNZ would achieve the full-year target set out in its 2017 statement of performanc­e expectatio­ns, which the broadcaste­r’s board is required to provide for its Government shareholde­rs.

That document shows an earnings before interest and tax target for the year ending June 30 of $9m, almost half of the $22.6m it achieved in 2016. It didn’t give a projection for total shareholde­r returns for the 2017 year, having recorded a 31 per cent decline last year. Its return on programme investment, or operating margin, is projected to slip to 40.7 per cent from 42.4 per cent.

Kenrick said free-to-air television “continues to provide unrivalled daily reach compared to other media options” but increasing­ly audiences were “showing up online”.

TVNZ is planning to launch a new website shortly, offering live TV and on-demand viewing, it said.

“While the ongoing fragmentat­ion of viewing audiences will continue to impact free-to-air audiences we expect the second half of the financial year will bring some certainty around the local market structure as the outcomes in relation to the mergers between Sky/Vodafone and NZME/Fairfax are determined,” Kenrick said.

The Commerce Commission is scheduled to hold a briefing this morning on the Sky-Vodafone proposal.

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 ?? Picture / Greg Bowker ?? CEO Kevin Kenrick says TVNZ has outperform­ed the broader TV market.
Picture / Greg Bowker CEO Kevin Kenrick says TVNZ has outperform­ed the broader TV market.

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