US ad spend up by a marginal 0.9% in Q2: Kantar Media

US ad spend up by a marginal 0.9% in Q2: Kantar Media

MUMBAI: Total advertisement expenditure in the US in the second quarter of 2012 increased 0.9 per cent from a year ago and finished the period at $34.4 billion, according to data released by Kantar Media a provider of strategic advertising and marketing information. Total spending for the first six months of the year grew 1.9 percent to $67.1 billion. The top 10 advertisers included P&G, Comcast, L‘Oreal, Time Warner and News Corp.

Kantar Media US chief research officer Jon Swallen said, "Ad spending growth sputtered during the second quarter and was unable to sustain its early year momentum. The advertising market is mirroring the tepid, slow growth performance of the general economy. Third quarter results will get a short-term boost from the Summer Olympics and political advertising but sustained long-term improvement will probably be linked to the health of consumer spending on the goods and services that marketers provide."

Television continued to lead the ad market in the second quarter of 2012, with overall growth of 4.4 per cent. Cable TV expenditures rose by 4.2 per cent and growth was driven by sports programming and networks with larger audience ratings. Network TV spending was down 0.4 per cent and comparisons were hurt by a timing shift that moved ad money for NCAA final four games out of April and into the prior quarter.

Spot TV expenditures increased by 4.6 per cent, lifted by a first wave of political money that began pouring into a handful of swing states crucial to the Presidential race. Double digit growth for spot TV spending in these select geographic areas was a marked contrast to the 2-3 percent growth rate for all other spot TV markets. Spanish language TV budgets jumped 17.8 percent on increases from direct response marketers, consumer package goods and auto manufacturers. Spending on syndication TV rose 10.0 percent, reflecting a combination of audience ratings performance and more hours of programming.

There were isolated pockets of growth beyond the television sector. Network radio spending rose 20 per cent but comparisons were inflated by the addition of more radio programming to Kantar Media‘s monitoring. Expenditures in outdoor media rose 2.5 percent, the ninth consecutive quarter of year-over-year increases, and were spurred by healthy gains from local retail and service businesses. Internet display advertising fell 5.4 percent in the second quarter. Spending totals, which do not include either video or mobile ad formats, were impacted by a reduced volume of ad impressions with some offset from higher average CPMs.

Print media continued to lose ground. Ad spending in Sunday magazines declined 7.6 per cent and consumer magazines dropped 2.6 percent due to steep cutbacks from pharmaceutical companies and auto manufacturers. Local newspaper budgets were down 1.9 percent as weaker spending by financial services, travel and telecom marketers erased increases from retailers and auto dealers. National Newspapers suffered spending reductions across key advertising categories as its total expenditures tumbled 10.7 percent during the quarter.

Spending among the ten largest advertisers in the second quarter of 2012 was $3,578.0 million, a 5.5 percent decrease compared to a year ago. Among the Top 100 marketers, a diversified group accounting for more than two-fifths of all measured ad expenditures, budgets rose 1.1 percent. Lower spending from the top ten group was most pronounced for a trio of advertisers (AT&T, General Motors, Procter & Gamble) that had expensive TV sponsorship positions in the Summer Olympics. Some of their second quarter reductions represent a deferral of spending into July and August to support Olympic marketing programs. Because of this timing phenomenon, the Top Ten advertisers are a less reliable benchmark when analyzing the Q2 ad marketplace.

Procter & Gamble was the top-ranked advertiser in the period, with measured spending of $577.3 million, down 13.2 percent. It was the sixth consecutive quarterly decline for P&G and is consistent with company announcements that it plans to tighten marketing budgets and shift more money out of traditional media.

The largest percentage drop among the top ten marketers came from General Motors which slashed its expenditures 30.1 percent, to $291.9million. GM‘s annual rate of measured ad spending is now at its lowest level in over a decade. By contrast, Toyota Motor spent $285.0 million in the second quarter, an increase of 22.7 percent compared to the year ago period when operations were severely curtailed by the Japanese earthquake and tsunami.

Ad expenditures for the two largest telecom marketers continued to move downward. AT&T expenditures fell 21.0 per cent, to $375.5 million and Verizon cut its media budgets by 14.7 per cent, to $326.9 million.

Unilever entered the top ten rankings by spending $278.3 million, a 48.6 per cent jump. The company raised marketing support broadly across its brand portfolio. Media expenditures at Comcast increased 12.8 percent and reached $469.7 million on higher budgets from its movie studio division. L‘Oreal investments rose 9.0 percent to $377.8 million as the company continued to aggressively support its core cosmetics and hair care brands.

Expenditures for the ten largest categories grew 1.3 per cent in the second quarter of 2012 to $21,248.1 million. Retail was the top category with expenditures of $3,837.4 million in the period, up just 0.9 per cent versus a year ago and a sharp slowdown from 8.6 per cent growth in the first quarter of 2012. Higher spending by department store brands was offset by declines from home improvement and home furnishing stores.

Automotive was the second largest category by dollar volume, with media spending of $3,373.5 million - a 7.7 per cent increase. Dealer ad budgets rose 16.8 percent while manufacturers spent 2.2 per cent more. Category growth was primarily attributable to Toyota and Honda, which could easily demonstrate growth compared to 2011, when their production and marketing activities were at a fraction of normal levels due to the earthquake and tsunami. Apart from Toyota and Honda, aggregate spending by the rest of the auto industry was flat in Q2. Second quarter expenditures for Personal Care Products increased 3.8 percent to $1,897.3 million, paced by competition among leading marketers of cosmetics, hair care and skin care products. Media investments within the Restaurant category were up 2.1 percent to $1,525.7 million, aided by major repositioning campaigns from Burger King and Wendy‘s.

Telecom ad expenditures were down by 2.4 per cent to $1,990.9 million. Category performance remains divided, with advertising budgets from wireless service providers wilting under the weight of slowing subscriber growth and rising capital investments for upgrading networks while TV service providers continue to raise their media budgets.

Ad spending in the Financial Services category turned sluggish during the second quarter, falling by 3.4 per cent to $1.9 billion on reductions from credit card issuers and ongoing weakness within the Consumer Banking segment.

After an extended run-up that began during the 2009 recession, expenditures for Food & Candy are now steadily falling back. Q2 continued the pattern as spending dropped 5.5 percent to $1,538.9 million.