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We're keeping the intro short this week, because there's a fair bit of
news. Here's another great ad from TBWA\London for the Nissan
Qashqai, a
suitably extravagant follow-up to last year's "Skateboard". The
latest spot, "Urbanproof" takes a similarly surreal approach to
urban driving. We also love the elegant new Johnnie Walker ad by Bartle
Bogle Hegarty. This drops the futuristic angle of last year's Android in
favour of something more historical but no less inspirational.
You probably have to be English (and to have grown up in the 1970s) to
understand the cultural role played by Cadbury's Flake ads. Here's the
latest incarnation, from Publicis London, which does away with a
long tradition of suggestive
imagery in favour of celebrity endorsement. Singer Joss Stone demonstrates
that she hasn't dispensed entirely with her English roots in her move
Stateside, and the new ad works quite nicely. Much better in fact than
the horrendous tie-up between Madonna and Sunsilk shampoo,
also out this week. Madge's new
album threatens to be overwhelmed by several cash-grabbing commercial
deals. The first of them is this deal with Unilever in the US. The
style-less new Sunsilk ad by French design
agency Desgrippes Gobé is a montage of Madonna's past re-inventions and apparently "premieres" the new single,
Four Minutes. Zzzz. See
it here. Cheer yourself up with some classic Cadbury's Flake ads from
yesteryear. This one
from 1969 is just downright rude.
Finally, "Singing Dog", a delightful ad for the Volkswagen
Polo by DDB London which manages to be sweet and sad and funny and very
clever all at the same time. Just look at how that tag-line anchors the
whole spot. Classy stuff. In case you're wondering, the track is I'm A Man
by the Spencer Davis Group.
In the news this past week: Advertisers
Financial news has dominated the headlines this week. Confidence in the global banking sector fell to new lows,
fed by
further falls in the value of mortgage-backed securities, and therefore
another wave of likely writedowns in the value of investment banks'
assets. As many observers have noted, although it was initially triggered
by
the financial hardship endured by debt-heavy homeowners in the US, the current banking
crisis is being fed not by a lack of liquidity among financial
institutions but by a spiral of mounting fear. As the perceived value of
mortgage-backed bonds and similar derivatives plunges, investors holding
them are forced to sell or mark down their total assets, prompting a
further fall in the value of the bonds... and so the vicious circle
continues. The absurdity of the situation is that the securities at
the heart of the crisis are now, arguably, priced far too cheaply, well
below their real market value. A wave of buying would restore confidence
in the sector as a whole, but the big banks are concerned that any move
on their part to start buying would lead to further panic-selling, and therefore promote another collapse in
values.
The latest fuel for the fire was the near bankruptcy of
prestigious US investment house Bear Stearns last weekend. That bank had
established itself as a specialist in mortgage-backed bonds, but two of
its funds were forced to close last summer in the first wave of the
current crisis. Nervous of its continuing exposure to the subprime sector,
a few institutional clients began withdrawing their cash from Bear Stearns
last week. As was the case in the UK with Northern Rock,
word spread, quickly turning into panic as other clients rushed to follow suit.
By Thursday, Bear Stearns was faced with the possibility that
it would run short of cash, and made a plea for help to JP Morgan
Chase,
its main settlement partner. Initially Morgan Chase extended a credit line
underwritten by the Federal Bank of New York. By the end of the
weekend, however, it had agreed to buy out Bear Stearns in full at a price of $2 per
share, or a total of just $236m. Just one week earlier Bear Sterns' stock
had been priced at $64 per share. There are numerous potential obstacles to
negotiate before the deal is concluded, including litigation from Bear Stearns
shareholders, opposition from management and further liabilities from its investments.
However, the Federal Reserve
agreed to provide up to $30bn of additional credit to underwrite Bear
Stearns' balance sheet and help JPM close the deal safely. By mid-week, a measure of confidence had returned to the
US financial sector after better than expected 1Q results from Goldman Sachs and Lehman
Brothers and a spectacularly successful IPO for Visa. As a result,
investors have been bidding up Bear Stearns' share price again on speculation
that a rival bid might emerge for the business.
It is precisely this level of frenzied speculation that is
making the markets so unstable. Bear Stearns shareholders lost a fortune
in the bank's takeover, but several short-selling hedge funds have
profited immensely from the collapse. The practise of short-selling
involves borrowing rather than buying shares and selling them at market
rate, while gambling that they can be replaced at a later date at a lower
price. The difference in the price between sale of the borrowed share and
its later replacement is pure profit. The WSJ reported that several funds
had held short positions in Bear Stearns since last summer, at which point
its stock was valued at $150. In theory, those firms have booked a profit of as
much as $148 per share as a result of the JPM takeover. Inspired by this situation, unscrupulous
traders in the UK attempted this week to engineer a similar collapse for
the local mortgage market leader HBOS. On Wednesday morning, false rumours
began to spread of that bank's imminent collapse, causing its share price
to plummet by more than 17% in just 20 minutes. The Bank of England was
forced to intervene, announcing that neither HBOS nor any other British
bank was in need of emergency funding, and HBOS's shares stabilized,
recovering some but not all of their losses. This illegal rumour-mongering
is widely practised in some parts of the investment community and even has
a name - trash n' cash. Financial regulators have vowed to keep a strict
watch on such activity in future.
Despite the bleak headlines, many companies are continuing to do well. Nestlé, for example, cheered the markets by forecasting unexpectedly
strong performance for the current year. It said it was experiencing
"very strong organic growth" in 1Q 2008. Another food group,
General Mills, the maker of Cheerios cereal, Yoplait and Pillsbury,
reported a 61% increase in 3Q earnings despite higher ingredient costs and
the slowing economy.
US market-watcher Beverage Digest released top line figures for the carbonated soft drinks market
in 2007. The
steady decline of volumes picked up
speed. Last year, the figure fell by 2.3%, compared to 0.6% and 0.2%
respectively in the two previous periods. Coca-Cola and PepsiCo's volumes
both fell by 2.7%. Total shipments were around
9.9bn cases, the lowest level since the late 1990s. However price hikes
and the introduction of several premium products resulted in a near-3% rise in
overall retail value to $72bn. As has been the case for several years,
volumes for the major companies edged downwards, while niche players,
mainly in the energy segment, demonstrated spectacular growth albeit from
a very low base. Hansen Natural and Rockstar, for example, experienced
volume jumps of 35% and 39% respectively, but still only account for a
minuscule proportion of the overall market: 0.8% for Hansen and 0.4% for
Rockstar. For more see
here for the Beverage Digest summary.
Air France-KLM took another step towards becoming the
national air carrier for Europe after its conditional takeover offer for
struggling Italian airline Alitalia was accepted by the latter's board.
The offer values Alitalia at just E139m, although Air France-KLM has
agreed to spend a further E610m to pay off bonds and E1bn to
refinance the business. The deal is dependent on a satisfactory
arrangement with Alitalia's hostile labour unions as well as the approval
of EU regulators. However
even the fiercely nationalistic Italian government has agreed that, unless
another offer materialises, the only real alternative for Alitalia would
be bankruptcy. Air France-KLM said it would preserve the Italian identity of
the airline, but it is expected to refocus the carrier on its main hub in
Rome, and terminate operations from Malpensa airport in Milan, widely
regarded as one of the world's worst airports. Earlier this year, Air
France-KLM also snapped up struggling Belgian carrier VLM. Meanwhile
British Airways, which had also attempted to acquire VLM, added to its
shareholding in Spanish carrier Iberia, now 13%, and said it would consider
raising the stake further.
There were also signs of a move towards consolidation in
the European telecoms industry. In the wake of the deal agreed last year
whereby Telefonica of Spain became the largest individual shareholder in
Telecom Italia, Deutsche Telekom has agreed to purchase a 20%
controlling stake in Greece's dominant phone group OTE, for around E2.5bn.
In addition to its dominant presence in the Greek fixed line, mobile and
broadband markets, OTE also has interests in six other countries in
Southern and Eastern Europe including Romania, Bulgaria and Serbia.
The war between Nestlé and Danone over the global baby foods
sector could be about to hot up even further. Both companies have added to
their businesses in recent months, with the acquisition of Gerber and
Royal Numico respectively. Now, there are reports that Bristol
Myers-Squibb has been quietly approaching potential buyers regarding its
Mead Johnson infant nutrition business, whose main brand is Enfamil. That
unit is being valued at between $7bn and $9bn. In the hotel business, UK leisure group Whitbread is in
talks to merge its Premier Inn budget hotel
chain with arch-rival Travelodge. Any such deal would
create a local giant with around 850 hotels.
Unilever and top people's store Harrods have teamed up to
produce a limited edition version of the FMCG group's Pot Noodle instant
snack. The luxury Harrods Poulet et Champignon Pot Noodle comes
in a limited-edition case with a fork and napkin. Harrods recommends
the use of filtered mineral water to "rehydrate the dish". The
product is priced at
£29.95, and all proceeds go to Action Against Hunger.
InBev's Stella Artois brand is to end its 30-year sponsorship of the annual tennis championships in
London which serve as a warm-up for the Wimbledon tournament. Last year
the event changed its name from the Stella Artois Tennis Tournament to the
Artois Championships to reflect the expanded range of Artois beers.
However this year's event will be the last under that name. The Lawn
Tennis Association has begun moves to find a new sponsor who will support
a broader range of activities than this one event. The original deal was largely engineered by adman and tennis fan Frank
Lowe, then at CDP, which handled the Stella account. What
chance then of the event now becoming the Tesco Tennis Tournament, after
Sir Frank's current #1 client, or even The Red Brick
Road Championships? Or more likely perhaps, the Heineken Tennis Tournament
after one of Frank Lowe's other major clients.
In another end of an era move, Marketing magazine reported that
PepsiCo is planning to drop footballer turned sports presenter Gary
Lineker as the public face of its Walkers Crisps business. Lineker has
featured in Walkers ads since 1995, initially in a twist on his reputation as one of the sport's best-known "nice guys".
Lineker will continue his association with the brand for the rest of 2008,
but agency AMV BBDO has been briefed to come up with a new concept for
2009.
Apple
was reported to be in discussions with the major music companies about a
new "all you can eat" business model that would give customers
unlimited access to the entire iTunes music library in exchange for a new
premium pricing for its iPod and iPhone devices. Such an arrangement would mirror
a deal already struck between Universal Music and Nokia, which now offers
a new "comes with music" service on selected models. Nokia is
thought to have secured that deal by offering the music companies a fee of
$80 per handset, divided up according to each company's share of the
market. So far, Apple is said to have made an offer of $20 per handset,
using as leverage its near-70% share of the sector.
In
the news this past week: Agencies
Aegis, parent of the Carat and Vizeum media networks and
Synovate market research, won more room for manoeuvre in its battle to avoid a
takeover bid from Havas with a strong set of results for 2007. Organic
revenue growth was twice the industry average at 9.8%, and outperformed
both Havas and Omnicom, which each reported 7.1%. Revenues broke the
£1bn level for the first time, rising 11% to £1.1bn. Pretax profits were
up almost 20% to £133.5m. Aegis had,
presumably, hoped to be able to coincide release of their annual results
with the announcement of a deal to acquire interactive media buyer i-level.
According to Campaign, the two companies had already agreed a price for
the sale of i-level and completed due diligence. However, Aegis is said to
have then reduced its offer by a third, citing the current economic
outlook. As a result, talks ended.
WFCA Integrated, the regional UK agency
which made its debut among the country's Top 30 agencies in the latest
Campaign/Nielsen Media Research rankings, has taken advantage of its new
status, agreeing to merge with another regional shop, Ekay, to create a
new group which claims to be the "the largest London agency outside
London". Combined billings for the business will be almost £70m, a
figure which would have placed the business above rivals such as Wieden
& Kennedy and DraftFCB in 2007 rankings. According to Nielsen,
Tunbridge Wells-based WFCA's
billings jumped by almost 36% in 2007 as a result of work for clients such
as Bathstore, Axa Insurance and Carpetright. Ekay, located in Gravesend in
Kent, works for Ocean Finance, Lakeside Shopping Centre and
Dagenham Motors. WFCA's Michael Richards is to be chief executive of the
enlarged agency; Ekay's Eddie Powell is managing director.
McDonalds is to consolidate its UK advertising with main agency Leo
Burnett. Part of the account had been shared with TBWA\London. However
TBWA will retain its position on McDonalds's global roster, handling the
fast feeder's "trust" business, which is designed to promote the
nutritional content of its meals. In other assignments, McGarryBowen
won a place on the HP roster; and Hertz appointed Iris
Worldwide to its pan-European account. For all
other appointments, subscribers can access the full Adbrands Account
Assignments database here.
In the news this past week:
Media
European media giant Bertelsmann reported what it called
"stable" performance for 2007. However the figures were
disappointing compared to strong results the year before. Revenues for 2007 declined almost 3% to
E18.8bn, reflecting the weakness of the US dollar as well as the sale of
the BMG music publishing division. Net income plunged from a record E2.4bn in
2006 to E405m. The previous year's figure was boosted by proceeds from
disposals, whereas the 2007 figure was impacted by higher interest
charges, significant restructuring and impairment charges, and several
special items. These included a payment of E245m to other music companies
to settle a long-running lawsuit relating to Bertelsmann's support of the
original pirate Napster service and a E96m regulatory fine imposed on a
subsidiary of RTL for price-fixing. At an accompanying press conference new group CEO Hartmut Ostrowski acknowledged unsatisfactory performance at
the DirectGroup book and music clubs division, and indicated that
Bertelsmann was looking for a buyer of its US clubs, which include
Columbia House, Bookspan and Book-of-the-Month.
Satellite broadcaster Sky strengthened its hold on broadcast soccer in the UK,
securing TV, mobile and online rights to the majority of UEFA Champions
League games from 2009 to 2012 with an offer reported to be around £240m.
However a small number of Wednesday night games are still up for auction.
Sky recently lost the next contract to show FA Cup games to Setanta and
ITV.
As always, if you haven't already done so, please confirm your subscription
to the free Adbrands Weekly Update by
clicking here or on the link at the foot of this email. Thank you for your
assistance!
Simon Tesler Publisher, Adbrands
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