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Lots of news to get through from the past two weeks, so we'll keep the
Ads of the Week preamble brief. Rocking our socks this week were... the
spot by Wieden & Kennedy London for Nokia's navigation-enabled 6220 handset; the fantastic promo for the
BBC Olympics coverage by Red Bee Media and RKC&R/Y&R with
Gorillaz and Tank Girl animator Jamie Hewlett; a brilliantly
conceived ad for New Zealand's National Foundation for the Deaf
by DDB NZ; and the latest hyper-surreal ad for Cadbury's Trident
Gum by JWT London.
In the news this
past two weeks: takeovers
There were further developments in the big three contested takeovers
which have been occupying the industry, so once again we'll tackle them all upfront.
First, InBev vs Anheuser-Busch. An increase in InBev's
offer price to $70 per share was enough to win over the Anheuser board. With
its price tag boosted to a whopping $52bn, the US giant agreed to
start discussing terms and conditions to create the undisputed #1 in
the global beer business, and despite the tension which had entered
the takeover battle prior to Anheuser's surrender, the first
meeting between the two sides was said to have been "gracious and
positive". The merged company will adopt the rather less gracious
name of Anheuser-Busch InBev, and its board will include two
representatives from Anheuser, one of whom is likely to be current A-B
chief August Busch IV. InBev's Carlos Brito will be CEO. The main
point still to be resolved is what will happen to Grupo Modelo of
Mexico, in which Anheuser has a near-50% stake. That company is
demanding a significant role in the merger negotiations, which could
lead either to its assimilation into an even larger whole, or its
spin-out as an entirely separate company.
The on-again, off-again Microsoft vs Yahoo struggle also
appears to have finally run its course, but with what is arguably a
rather less satisfying conclusion (for anyone other than Yahoo CEO
Jerry Yang, that is). After several weeks of talks, Yahoo was able
to placate Carl Icahn, the activist investor who had been expected to
call for the dismissal of the Yahoo board at tomorrow's annual
meeting. The success of Icahn's motion was seen as central to a renewed
bid by Microsoft, which had earlier proposed yet another plan under which it
would buy out Yahoo's search business and leave the rest of the
company under Icahn's control. No one seemed very excited by that
suggestion, and instead Icahn made do with three seats on
the Yahoo board. In return he withdrew his dismissal
motion. At the same time, Yahoo reported generally solid 2Q results which at least
demonstrated that the
company is holding steady in the current difficult environment.
Yahoo's future however remains as uncertain as ever. It will be
interesting to see what transpires at the annual meeting.
Signaling that
he was drawing a line under the whole affair, Microsoft CEO Steve
Ballmer told analysts: "It didn't work out. Fine. We're done. We
can move on." Instead the company announced plans to
enhance its existing alliance with Facebook (in which it has a 5%
shareholding) by introducing web search and associated ads on the US
pages of the social networking portal before the end of the year. The
effective termination of the takeover battle led to a shake-up at
Microsoft, including the departure of Kevin Johnson, the executive who
had led the Yahoo bid and was also responsible for the
launch of the Windows upgrade Vista. Johnson is leaving to become CEO of
infrastructure company Juniper Networks. As a result, Microsoft
announced plans to split the Platforms & Services division
headed by Johnson in two. It will now operate as Windows/Windows Live
and Online Services.
In a coda to the whole saga, Yahoo chairman Roy Bostock went on the record to draw an
unfavourable comparison between Microsoft's protracted and ultimately
futile pursuit of his company with the near-surgical precision of
InBev's assault on Anheuser-Busch, which was done and dusted in a
matter of weeks. Bostock accused Microsoft's Ballmer of lacking the
commitment and nerve required to pull off the Yahoo takeover.
There was some movement in WPP's takeover battle for
TNS. As had been expected, rival buyer Gfk confirmed that it had
recruited the wealthy Herz family of Germany to help fund its own
offer, which will need to top WPP's near-£1.1bn bid. Other funding
partners are still being sought. UK private equity fund Cinven was
also said to be in talks to add its support.
In the news this
past two weeks: Advertisers
In the US, the crisis in the banking and home loans
sector continued to grow, and the government was forced to provide
emergency funding to mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie
Mac, the country's two
biggest home lenders, after their share prices plunged in the wake of
falling investor confidence. The Congressional Budget Office estimated
that the cost of bailing out Fannie and Freddie could rise as high as
$25bn. Californian savings & loan
IndyMac was not so lucky, becoming the biggest lender to fail
in the US in two decades, despite $32bn of assets. That collapse
prompted warnings from
analysts that many more small and midsize American banks could follow suit. It
was suggested that as many as 150 out of the country's 7,500 banks
could fail before the end of 2009. In the mean time, the big
banks began unveiling their latest quarterly figures, in another
roll-call of multi-billion-dollar write-offs and huge quarterly
losses.
The resulting turmoil is providing rich pickings for stronger financial institutions. French bank
Credit Mutuel took its first significant
steps outside its home market with the acquisition for at least E4.9bn
of the German consumer finance and retail banking business of US giant
Citigroup. Citi is selling off what it considers to be non-core assets
to rebuild its balance sheet. It will retain its investment banking operations in
Germany. Currently Credit Mutuel is France's #4 bank by assets, but is
keen to diversify beyond the intensely competitive domestic market. The
deal is expected to close before the end of the year.
Meanwhile in the UK, Alliance & Leicester, one of
the country's leading mortgage lenders, agreed to accept a £1.3bn
takeover by Santander of Spain, which already owns larger UK lender
Abbey. The deal represents a significant comedown for the British
company: it is believed to have turned down a previous offer
from Santander a year ago worth twice as much. A&L shareholders
initially hoped that a higher bid might emerge from another British bank,
but no such offer has materialised. If the deal goes ahead, A&L will be absorbed into
Abbey. Santander's chairman Emilio Botin is rapidly gaining a
reputation as one of the smartest figures in the industry, not least
because his company has been left virtually unscathed by the current
credit crisis. In a video lecture at an awards
ceremony which took place the night before the A&L bid, he offered
some tongue-in-cheek advice to other members
of the international banking community: “If you don’t fully
understand an instrument, don’t buy it. If you would not buy a
specific product for yourself, don’t try to sell it. If you do not
know your customers very well, don’t lend them any money. If you do
these three things, you will be a better banker, my son.”
In another possible Anglo-Spanish tie-up, merger talks between British
Airways and Iberia of Spain gathered pace. The two airlines have been
marketing partners since the late 1990s. If a deal is completed, the
airlines are expected to maintain their existing separate identities
under the umbrella of an umbrella holding group, in a similar fashion
to Air France-KLM.
Also in the UK, there was further consolidation in
the supermarket sector with the purchase of Somerfield
supermarkets by The Co-operative Group for a little under £1.6bn. The
deal had been expected. It strengthens the Co-op's position as the
UK's #5 food retailer, more than doubling store numbers to around
3,000 outlets. Annual sales will be around £8bn, and the enlarged
group will have around 8% share of the market, behind Morrisons' 11%.
The Somerfield brand will be phased out. The Co-operative Group is
already the UK’s largest mutual retailer. In addition to its
supermarket business, it runs the country's third largest retail
pharmacy chain, the number one provider of funeral services and the
largest independent travel business.
Meanwhile Tesco announced plans to diversify into a
full range of banking services. It signed off on a deal to acquire the
50% share held by partner Royal Bank of Scotland in Tesco Financial
Services for £950m, and said it would begin offering current
accounts as well as savings and insurance products.
Unilever signed off on two significant disposals. As
anticipated, it agreed to sell its range of Bertolli olive oils. The buyer is Grupo SOS of Spain,
which already owns rival oil Carbonell. However Unilever will retain
control of the Bertolli name for its expanding range of Mediterranean food
products, such as spreads, pasta sauces and frozen
meals. The price tag for the oil business was quoted as £500m. An
even more significant deal was the agreement to sell its North
American laundry detergent business. As expected, this is being
acquired by private label manufacturer Huish, which is in turn controlled by investment
fund Vestar Capital Partners. Huish's existing detergent operations
will be combined with the Unilever brands to form a new company, Sun
Products. The price tag on the deal is a cash payment of almost
$1.1bn, plus preference shares in the new entity worth around $375m.
Meanwhile the group also began moves to find successor to group CEO
Patrick Cescau, who is expected to step down next year.
General Electric said it was considering the
disposal of other units within its consumer & industrial division
in addition to the appliances business already marked for sale. The
key additional unit which could come onto the market would be GE
Lighting, which served as the original core of the group following
Thomas Edison's development and commercialisation of incandescent
light bulbs.
Toyota's worldwide
vehicle sales for the first half of 2008 were well ahead of General
Motors', confirming expectations that the Japanese company will
finally become the global #1 for the first time for 2008. Toyota’s
first-half unit sales rose 2.2% to 4.82m vehicles; GM's slipped by 3%
to 4.54m. However, even Toyota is feeling the strain in the North American
market where sales of its own pick-up trucks and SUVs have plunged
alongside locally produced vehicles. The company cut its full-year
forecast to 9.5m vehicles, up just 1.5% on last year, compared to the 5%
increase it had originally projected.
Apple came under pressure after rumours
began to circulate regarding the health of CEO Steve Jobs. At
a developer conference last month, he shocked delegates with his gaunt
appearance. Famously, Jobs
had a near-brush with death in 2004 when he was diagnosed with
pancreatic cancer. Luckily for Jobs, it turned out to be one of the
very few forms of pancreatic cancer which is not terminal and he was
declared cured after an operation. What concerned investors, however,
was that Apple kept Jobs' illness a secret until after he was given a
clean bill of health.
His recent appearance sparked concerns over a return of the illness,
and these worries were exacerbated when an Apple spokesman
refused to answer analysts' questions with anything more than what was
effectively "no comment". Jobs' continuing presence at Apple is seen
as crucial to the company's future, and the threat of his possible
absence caused its share price to plunge. After several days of wild
speculation, Jobs himself gave an off-the-record interview to New York
Times columnist Joe Nocera to calm the markets. Although Nocera
respected Jobs' privacy about the precise nature of the illness, he did
state that it is not cancer and is not considered life-threatening.
Bertelsmann agreed to sell its US direct-to-consumer
sales arm to privately owned investment fund Najafi Companies for an
undisclosed sum. The business includes the mail order DVD and music
retailer Columbia House and a number of book clubs including
Book-of-the-Month.
eBay scored a significant victory in the ongoing
controversy over the sale of counterfeit goods, following the ruling by a
US judge against a suit from luxury jeweller Tiffany which argues
that the internet company should be held liable for the sale of fakes
on its site. The judge said that the current systems employed by eBay to guard
against the sale of fakes were adequate. Instead, he said, it
was up to luxury companies such as Tiffany to police their trademarks
themselves. Two weeks ago, in a similar suit brought in France by LVMH,
a French court found against eBay and fined the company almost E40m in
damages and compensation.
In another court case, toymaker Mattel won an
important victory in its battle to defend Barbie against streetwise competitor Bratz. The
latter dolls were in fact designed by a former employee of Mattel, Carter Bryant.
Mattel has issued a number of lawsuits against both Bryant and Bratz owner MGA
Entertainment, claiming
that Bryant's original designs for Bratz dolls were made when he was still a Mattel
employee and therefore belong to the company. Last week, a US court ruled in
favour of Mattel. The
court has yet to decide whether or not the Bratz dolls themselves
infringe Mattel's copyright, in which case substantial damages could be
payable. Mattel is seeking an injunction to suspend the sale of Bratz
altogether.
Jim Stengel, arguably the world's most powerful client
in his role as chief marketing officer at P&G, is to step down
next month in preparation for early retirement at the end of October
after 25 years at the company. His replacement is Marc Pritchard,
currently P&G's president of strategy,
and a former head of the cosmetics and personal care division. It's
not yet known what Stengel, still in his early 50s, intends to do
next. According to a P&G spokesman he has indicated that he wishes
to pursue "a personal passion to influence other marketers and
promote marketing as a positive force in the world". The #2 marketer at US phone giant
AT&T is also
stepping down. SVP advertising & sponsorship Wendy Clark is to
leave the company in advance of the relocation of its corporate HQ
from San Antonio to Dallas. A replacement has yet to be named.
There was a different sort of high profile defection at UK music group
EMI, currently struggling to regain market share
under private equity buyer Guy Hands. In a move that had been
anticipated for some months, the company's best-known artists, the
Rolling Stones, confirmed plans to quit the label for industry leader
Universal Music. The new contract with Universal will cover three new
albums as well as the group's back catalogue since 1971.
In
the news this past two weeks: Agencies
There were several significant personnel changes in the
agency world. Long-serving O&M chairman-CEO Shelly Lazarus
announced plans for her succession. She will step down as global CEO
in January 2009, to be replaced by Miles Young, currently chairman of
Ogilvy Asia Pacific. Lazarus will remain worldwide chairman of the
network. Also, Bartle Bogle Hegarty executive creative director John O'Keefe
resigned from the agency after 18 years to take up a new role as
worldwide creative director at WPP, overseeing output from all that
group's subsidiary agencies. He was replaced at BBH by Nick Gill,
previously creative director. Rosie Arnold steps up to become deputy
creative director.
Meanwhile, Joe McCarthy, Johnson & Johnson's VP,
worldwide advertising, is crossing the client/agency line to take up a
new role as CEO of Publicis New York. It's not the first such change
for McCarthy. He has crossed back and forth between agency and
advertiser throughout his career. Starting as an ad man (at Saatchi
& Saatchi), he later joined Nike as head of global advertising. In
2001 he was back into the agency world to co-found Boston agency
McCarthy Mambro Bertino, before joining J&J in 2005. McCarthy is
taking over the Publicis NY role from Gill Duff who is expected to
stay with the group in another as yet unspecified role. Shortly
afterwards, Publicis Groupe also announced the resignation of John
Farrell, president & CEO of the group's Specialised Agencies &
Marketing Services (SAMS) division. That unit oversees the group's
niche units in areas such as healthcare, shopper marketing, PR and
corporate communications.
BBDO strengthened its relationship with Procter & Gamble, whose
roster it joined following P&G's acquisition of Gillette, by
snapping up Cincinnati-based creative agency Barefoot Advertising.
That company, founded by former P&G marketer Doug Worple, works on
a number of P&G brands, mostly below-the-line. The unit is being
absorbed into BBDO's direct & digital marketing arm Proximity
Worldwide. In a separate deal, Interpublic acquired New York digital
agency HUGE.
Although no decisions have yet been made about future
advertising assignments, DDB Chicago was reported by Ad Age
to be steeling itself for significant cuts in marketing budget in the
wake of InBev's takeover of key client Anheuser-Busch. Separately this
week, Interpublic's Deutsch agency was added to the A-B roster for an
as yet undisclosed account. Ad Age also reported that Johnson & Johnson
is to launch a creative and media
review for its mammoth pharmaceuticals portfolio. Campaign in the UK
reported that Heineken is prepping a review of its global creative
account, held mainly by The Red Brick Road.
In other account assignments, Home Depot called a review of its entire
marketing roster, worth around $600m a year in billings. Richards
Group currently holds creative; Initiative has media. Kohler placed
media for its faucets and other kitchen hardware with Carat; and
Diageo moved creative for Jose Cuervo tequila into JWT New
York. In
Europe, Danone moved creative for its recently acquired infant formula
brands Milupa and Cow & Gate from Leo Burnett to Euro RSCG;
Wrangler placed European media with MPG, who also won UK
airline BMI; Conde Nast appointed DDB Paris
to manage pan-Euro creative for Glamour magazine. In the UK, News
International launched a review of creative for The Sun newspaper; and
Boots called a review of UK media, out of Mediacom. For all
other appointments, subscribers can access the full Adbrands Account
Assignments database here.
In the news this
past two weeks:
Media
Google and Viacom agreed a compromise on the terms of a court order
issued two weeks ago that the search giant, which owns video service YouTube,
hand over personal details of everyone who has ever watched a video on the
site. Viacom's legal team want to use the data to show how often
unauthorised Viacom material was viewed on the site. However, in the
wake of protests from privacy groups, all personal information will be
now stripped out of the user logs before they are released to Viacom,
so that specific individual users are not identified. Also this past
week, Google was hit by two new lawsuits over copyright infringement, from Italian mediaowner Mediaset and its Spanish
affiliate Telecinco. Mediaset is seeking damages of around $800m for
illegally uploaded clips.
In the UK, the media regulator Ofcom handed the BBC a
record fine of £400,000 for rigging phone-ins on TV and radio shows. The fine relates to a long-running controversy over
shows where the audience is encouraged to call-in, either to
participate in a competition or to vote to select winners. In these
cases, said Ofcom, "the BBC deceived its audience by faking
winners of competitions and deliberately conducting competitions
unfairly. The investigations found that in some cases, the production
team had taken premeditated decisions to broadcast competitions and
encourage listeners to enter in the full knowledge that the audience
stood no chance of winning." In other cases, programme makers made up the names
of winners because technical problems had prevented them from
selecting a genuine caller. Although the
BBC received no direct financial benefits from the phone-ins, Ofcom
said the rigging constituted a breach of public trust. Earlier this year, commercial
broadcaster ITV was
fined £6m for its abuse of premium-rate telephone lines. However, in
the US, the $550,000 fine imposed by the FCC on what was then Viacom
in connection with the Janet Jackson/Justin Timberlake
"Nipple-gate" incident was over-turned on appeal.
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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