Western Daily Press

ITV cautions over drop in ad revenues

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ITV has posted a surge in advertisin­g revenues, but cautioned over a tougher summer as it comes up against last year’s boost from the European football championsh­ips and uncertaint­y in the wider economy.

The broadcasti­ng giant behind hit shows including Love Island and I’m A Celebrity... Get Me Out Of Here! said total ad revenues lifted 16% in the three months to March, helping wider external revenues lift 18% to £834 million.

It said April also saw a strong performanc­e, with ad revenues up 9%, though it is braced for a steep decline over the rest of the second quarter, forecastin­g a drop of around 8% in May and 15% in June.

The group is coming up against tough second-quarter comparativ­es from a year ago, when Euro 2020 helped ad revenues rocket 89% higher, while it also flagged wider uncertaint­y amid the cost-of-living crisis and the Ukraine war.

The group said: “As expected, advertisin­g comparativ­es get much tougher in the second quarter and third quarter against the Euro football championsh­ips in 2021 and we are mindful of the macroecono­mic and geopolitic­al uncertaint­y.”

ITV still e xpects the first half as a

1 6 Percentage rise in total ad revenues at ITV in the three months to March

whole to see ad revenues lift 5% thanks to the bumper first quarter.

Chief executive Dame Carolyn McCall said the group was on track to launch its new on-demand platform called ITVX in the final three months of the year, which is set to help it deliver a target for at least £750 million in digital revenues by 2026.

The group unveiled ITVX alongside annual results in March, when it also spooked investors with plans to increase digital content investment, spending £20 million, and £160 million next year for ITVX.

Overall spend on programmes are expected to reach £1.23 billion this year and £1.35 billion next year.

The new ITVX platform will replace the ITV Hub brand and will give subscriber­s the choice of watching ad-funded content free of charge, or to trade up and buy ad-free content, such as BritBox.

Dame Carolyn said: “We are making good progress in our goal to supercharg­e streaming by increasing our hours of content by 50% in the quarter to 6,000 hours and making available the majority of scripted programmes in full for streaming at the same time as the initial broadcast. All of this provides a solid foundation for ITVX – our free, ad-funded streaming service – which is on track for launch in the fourth quarter and we remain confident that we will deliver at least £750 million of digital revenue by 2026.”

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