Dentsu figures show signs of recovery as revenue grows in light of Asian market unrest. Barry Dudley writes in The Drum

14th August 2024

Marginal organic growth in Dentsu’s H2 results masks a business that may just be regaining some momentum, suggests Green Square’s Barry Dudley as he looks at the Japanese holding company’s latest numbers.

At first sight, an organic growth in revenue of 0.2% in Q2 seems an odd thing to lead your results announcement with. Or maintaining the guidance for the full year at a mere 1%. But for Dentsu, it’s a pretty big moment because in all of the previous five quarters, it had shrunk – by 1.6% in Q1 2023, 4.7% in Q2, 6.0% in Q3, 6.6% in Q4 and 3.7% in Q1 2024.

Strength in the home market of Japan sits behind this, in particular “continued recovery in internet advertising,” so H1 organic growth of 2.1% was healthy – Japan represents 40% of net revenue. But all other geographies declined across H1: Americas down 5.1%, EMEA down 0.9% and APAC down 6.6%.

The Americas “has continued its recovery, recording a number of new client wins” and it is hoped there will be a return to growth in H2 – encouraging for Dentsu’s second biggest market.

EMEA also seems to be turning a corner, with the 0.9% H1 decline consisting of a 9.4% drop in Q1 but a 7.8% organic growth in Q2, with “stronger than expected Media performance in some local markets” being part of the story here.

APAC would appear to be the region that still needs fixing, with pretty scary declines in all of the last six quarters of between 6.2% and 9.1%. The focus here is on “long term recovery,” but perhaps there’s a shorter-term in organic strategy (acquisitions) to reset the trajectory.

There is reference to exporting its Business Transformation offering out of Japan into other markets and “expanding globally” Dentsu Lab, “the group’s creativity and innovation proposition.” For me, it’s the latter that will likely fuel the future.

Being “positioned at the convergence of marketing, technology and consulting,” it is taking on the consulting and tech giants, not just the other marketing groups (and independents). What will set Dentsu apart is how “creativity and innovation” is applied within all this.

And what of the share price given the stock market turmoil in recent weeks – closing at 3,870¥ today after the results were announced, this is almost exactly where things were at on the close of business on Friday, August 2 (3,872¥) before the market meltdown the following Monday.

There’ll be more twists and turns to come, I’m sure, but for the moment, Dentsu seems to be gathering some positive momentum.

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