Bangkok Post

Sorrell plots comeback with S4 Capital

- KATE HOLTON

Martin Sorrell is staging a comeback just six weeks after he was ousted from WPP Plc, using the same formula as in the 1980s when he transforme­d a little-known shell company into the world’s biggest advertisin­g group.

One of Britain’s best known businessme­n, Sorrell said he would invest £40 million ($53 million) of his own money into Derriston Capital Plc while institutio­nal investors have pledged £150 million to buy marketing companies.

The London-listed group will be renamed S4 Capital, in reference to four generation­s of Sorrell’s family, while he will become executive chairman.

Its next moves are likely to be closely watched in an industry facing questions over whether the ad guru’s model is still the best way to deliver adverts, marketing, research data and media buying in a digital world.

WPP and its peers have struggled in recent years as major consumer goods groups such as Unilever trimmed spending on marketing and took some services in house, while consultanc­ies such as Accenture have stepped up competitio­n and Facebook and Google dominate the online ad market.

“S4 Capital is a company that aims to build a multi-national communicat­ion services business focused on growth,” the 73-year-old said. “There are significan­t opportunit­ies for developmen­t in technology, data and content.”

The new company, which has raised £51 million through Sorrell and institutio­nal investors including Lombard Odier, Miton, a Rothschild investment unit, Schroders and Toscafund, is in early talks over a number of potential acquisitio­ns.

The group is looking to buy assets in the faster growing part of the industry such as technology and data which can be used to maximise the effectiven­ess of advertisin­g, while markets such as India could also be of interest.

Taking charge of a listed shell company repeats the tactic Sorrell used in the 1980s when he took a stake in Wire and Plastics Products, a maker of shopping baskets, and used it as a vehicle to buy some of the most famous advertisin­g agencies such as JWT and Ogilvy & Mather.

Derriston Capital is a littleknow­n two-year-old listed shell company set up to invest in medical technology.

Over 30 years Sorrell built WPP i nto a company with 200,000 staff in 112 countries by adding market research groups, media buyers, and public relations firms such as Finsbury.

Worth £16 billion, WPP returned millions to shareholde­rs, including its CEO, and dominated the industry for decades. According to Thomson Reuters data, Sorrell is still the eighth biggest investor in WPP, with a 1.4% stake.

Sorrell had vowed to break down the barriers at WPP to make it easier for clients to get all the services they needed from a small team, rather than from a range of people among the more than 400 agencies it owned.

Starting again should make it easier to mould a business more aligned to the needs of today.

WPP competes with US groups Omnicom Group Inc and Interpubli­c Group of Companies Inc (IPG), France’s Publicis Groupe SA and Japan’s Dentsu Inc, while thousands of small independen­t companies provide everything from ads for mobile phones to creative work and data analytics.

Sorrell quit WPP after the board opened an investigat­ion into an allegation of personal misconduct.

The company has not given any details and Sorrell has denied any wrongdoing. He told staff he had stepped down because the disruption was putting too much pressure on the business.

 ??  ?? Sorrell: Former CEO of WPP
Sorrell: Former CEO of WPP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand