WPP’s share price fell almost 12% on Wednesday after Sir Martin Sorrell’s advertising group reported a cut in client spending for the first seven months of its financial year.
WPP revised its sales growth down from forecasts of 2% to just 0-1%, citing particular pressure in the FMCG or packaged goods sector and weak trading in America.
The revised forecast is the worst since the global recession in 2009 when like-for-like sales fell by 8.1%.
However, the UK’s like-for-like revenue was up 5.8% in the second quarter making it the strongest performing region, and an improvement on the first quarter growth of 3.2%.
“The advertising giant cited falling demand from its clients as a reason for the reduced revenue forecast,” said CMC Markets analyst David Madden. “This is the second time the sale forecast has been trimmed this year, and that is a warning sign to traders, as it could be the start of a trend.
“In 2017, the share price has created a series of lower lows and lower highs, which is a worrying sign.”
Despite the slowdown, total group revenue for the first six months of the year rose to £7.4bn from £6.5bn.
Pre-tax profit grew by 52.4% to £779m.