The Guardian Australia

ITV blames knock-on effects of Hollywood strikes for revenue hit

- Jane Croft

ITV has blamed the knock-on effects of the US actors and writers strike for a hit to its revenues – but expects the Euro 2024 football tournament to contribute to a bounceback later this year.

The UK’s largest free to air broadcaste­r said last year’s Hollywood strikes had dented the performanc­e of its ITV Studios division, which has made shows such as Love Island and Mr Bates vs the Post Office.

ITV said revenues had fall by 16% to £382m in the first three months of the year owing to knock-on delays in commission­ing new projects as the industry continued to recover from the strikes in the US. ITV previously said the Hollywood strike would push about £80m of revenue from 2024 into 2025.

Revenues at the studios division are expected to remain broadly flat on last year, with the first quarter decline offset by a promising pipeline of programmes, including Hell’s Kitchen US for Fox and The Better Sister and Lazarus for Amazon Prime Video.

Despite attracting huge audiences with Mr Bates vs the Post Office, ITV revealed last month that it had lost £1m on the agenda-setting drama about the Horizon IT scandal.

The TV and film production industry has faced multiple headwinds, as a slowdown in the advertisin­g market combined with the US strikes and a slump in commission­s caused companies to struggle. Many film- and TVmakers were forced into “heartbreak­ing” decisions to retrain.

But ITV shares rose almost 2% after the broadcaste­r reported that advertisin­g had started to recover in the second quarter. The recovery, it said, had been bolstered by improving consumer confidence as well as advertiser­s taking airtime for the Uefa Euro 2024 football championsh­ips in June.

ITV’s total first-quarter revenue was down 7% at £887m, as the growth in total advertisin­g revenue was offset by the decline in revenue from its studios division.

Total advertisin­g revenue rose by 3% in the first quarter, with an increase of about 12% expected in the second quarter.

The recovery in ad revenues is significan­t for ITV, which was badly hit by last year’s brutal drop-off, reporting a 15% fall in linear TV advertisin­g in 2023. Carolyn McCall, its chief executive, said last July that ITV was facing the worst advertisin­g crisis since the advertisin­g downturn that accompanie­d the 2008 financial crisis.

McCall said on Thursday: “Over the full year we expect ITV Studios’ revenues to be broadly flat. We have a strong pipeline of programmes, good demand for our quality content as we increasing­ly diversify our customer base towards streamers and the phasing of deliveries is heavily weighted to the second half of the year.”

ITV has already announced a costsaving programme that it hopes will provide savings of £40m this year, helped by making its operations more efficient and by new technology.

 ?? Photograph: Chris Pizzello/AP ?? ITV said revenues had fallen by 16% to £382m in the first three months of the year owing to knock-on delays in commission­ing as the industry recovered from the US strikes.
Photograph: Chris Pizzello/AP ITV said revenues had fallen by 16% to £382m in the first three months of the year owing to knock-on delays in commission­ing as the industry recovered from the US strikes.

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