|

UK Ad Forecasts From ZenithOptimedia

UK Ad Forecasts From ZenithOptimedia

UK advertising growth is expected to be just 1.1% in current prices this year, rising to 2.9% in 2004 and 3.2% in 2005, according to the latest forecasts from ZenithOptimedia (see ZenithOptimedia Downgrades European Ad Forecasts).

The figures include spend on the major media of newspapers, magazines, television, radio, cinema, outdoor and the internet. On this basis, total UK spend is expected to be £10.4 billion this year, rising to £10.7 billion in 2004 and £11.0 billion in 2005.
UK Advertising Spend Forecasts 
           
  2001  2002  2003  2004  2005 
Spend (US$m) 15,888 15,889 16,067 16,538 17,074
Spend (£m) 10,250 10,251 10,366 10,670 11,016
Source: ZenithOptimedia, April 2003 

UK Advertising Growth Forecasts 
         
  2002  2003  2004  2005 
Current prices  0.0 1.1 2.9 3.2
Constant prices  -2.1 -1.4 0.4 0.7
Source: ZenithOptimedia, April 2003 

Television spend rose by 4.5% last year. However, following record levels of commercial viewing and reallocation of budgets from the large and most expensive channels to smaller, cheaper ones, the 2003 market is now deflating to 1.0% growth in current prices (or -1.6% in constant prices).

In the longer-term, viewer migration to multi-channel services should help the TV ad industry, as the ad breaks are typically longer on these platforms. As a result, TV is expected to start regaining advertising share and show real growth in 2004.

In the press sector, 2003 is expected to show little growth, with consumer magazines already suffering as advertisers commit funds late into the market. Travel and motors kept the market buoyant in recent months but have weakened, says the report.

ZenithOptimedia expects outdoor, radio and cinema to post real growth in 2003 on strength in particular categories (notably entertainment, cosmetics and travel in outdoor; FMCG, London congestion charge, telephone number enquiry deregulation in radio), with cinema in particular benefiting from record admissions and tactical advertising expenditure, especially with war-related cancellations.

Media Jobs