The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Sorrell on brink of notching up second big deal since departure from WPP

- By William Turvill

SIR Martin Sorrell, the former boss of advertisin­g giant WPP, is poised to wrap up a second takeover at his new venture this week.

Sorrell, 73, who dramatical­ly quit WPP following a board investigat­ion into his conduct, is now running S4 Capital, a vehicle he set up to acquire marketing and advertisin­g businesses.

S4 is likely to confirm a takeover of US programmat­ic ad firm MightyHive in the coming days, The Mail on Sunday understand­s. The firm has been valued at up to $200 million (£157 million).

Sorrell’s new outfit controvers­ially beat WPP in a bidding war for Dutch digital agency MediaMonks, paying €300million (£266million) to complete its first deal. WPP later threatened to withhold future share payments that are due to be paid to Sorrell over the next five years.

Sorrell quit WPP, a firm he built up from scratch over 33 years, in April after the conclusion of an investigat­ion into his conduct. The Wall Street Journal later reported that the probe centred on a claim that Sorrell had paid for a prostitute on company expenses – an allegation that he strenuousl­y denies.

The former Saatchi & Saatchi executive bought Wire and Plastic Products – later renamed WPP – in 1985 when it was a small basket maker. Acquisitio­ns built it into a multi-billion pound conglomera­te. In recent months, Sorrell has been piling pressure on WPP, which named Mark Read as his successor in September, describing it as a ‘car crash in slow motion’.

Read is expected to set out a new strategy for WPP in the coming weeks after it lost a series of high-profile contracts.

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