Greenock Telegraph

Broadcaste­r reveals 16% drop in profits

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BROADCASTI­NG giant ITV has revealed a 16% plunge in revenues from its production arm after taking a hit from last year’s US writers’ and actors’ strike.

The group behind the hit shows Mr Bates Vs The Post Office and Love Island said ITV Studios’ revenues tumbled to £382 million in the three months to March 31 from £457m a year earlier.

ITV warned it also expects to see Studios’ revenues fall again over the second quarter after the strike action – one of the longest in the industry’s history – brought production­s to a halt in 2023, sending shockwaves across Hollywood and globally.

The division is also being impacted by “weaker demand from free-to-air broadcaste­rs in Europe who have been holding back spend until they see more certainty in the advertisin­g market”, according to ITV.

ITV had previously warned that the strikes would delay around £80m of revenues from 2024 into 2025.

But it said in its latest update that it expects ITV Studios revenues to be “broadly flat” overall in 2024.

The group saw total advertisin­g revenues rise 3% in the first quarter and said it is expecting a jump of around 8% in the half-year to June 30, with the upcoming Euros football tournament expecting to help drive ad demand.

The ad boost was offset by the production business woes, with total revenues down 7% at £887m in the first quarter.

Carolyn McCall, ITV chief executive, said: “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, including Hell’s Kitchen USA, The Better Sister, A.C.A.B, Showtrial and Ludwig.”

She added: “Our group cost savings programmes are on course to deliver £40m of savings this year as previously guided.”

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