Omar Oakes
Mar 19, 2019

Sorrell's S4 Capital posts £20.1m pre-tax profit

Only 6% of revenue came from APAC.

MediaMonks CEO Victor Knaap and Martin Sorrell
MediaMonks CEO Victor Knaap and Martin Sorrell

Sir Martin Sorrell’s S4 Capital has posted a £20.1 million (US$26.68 million) pre-tax profit in its inaugural year of trading. 

The marketing services company, established by Sorrell less than two months after his abrupt exit from WPP in April last year, published its first full-year accounts Monday morning in the UK.

On a pro-forma basis (as if the company had been trading for a full year), S4’s adjusted pre-tax profit was £20.1 million for the year ending 31 December 2018, up 133% from 2017.

The comparison with 2017 is against the previous income statements of MediaMonks and MightyHive, both of which S4 acquired last year.

Meanwhile, S4’s pro-forma billings were £291.2 million. Its pro-forma revenue was £135.9 million and pro-forma gross profit was £105.2 million, up 58% and 49% respectively on 2017.

The company also posted £20.6 million of net debt, which includes a £45.6 million loan that was partly used to buy MediaMonks last July.

Sorrell outbid WPP to acquire the Dutch content production shop and today’s results confirm that S4 paid £261.8 million for the "merger". This deal comprised £205.4 million in cash and £56.4 million in equity.

The second acquisition in December for MightyHive, a programmatic marketing services agency, was for £115.5 million, today’s results show, consisting of £71.9 million in cash and £43.6 million in equity.

Nearly two-thirds of S4’s revenue comes from the Americas (65%), while the EMEA region accounts for less than a third (29%). The company said it has appointed "leading industry figures" to spearhead Asia-Pacific growth, from where only 6% of its revenue came in 2018.

New-business wins include Procter & Gamble, Nestlé, Avon, Mondelez International, Bayer, Electronic Arts and Electrolux, while S4’s current pipeline is approximately twice the level of last year, the company said in its financial statement.

Sorrell, S4’s executive chairman, said: "It is clear that the company's purely digital model based on first-party data fuelling digital content and programmatic is resonating with clients. Our tagline, 'faster, better, cheaper', and unitary, one P&L structure also appeal strongly.

"The imperatives will be to broaden and deepen relationships with existing and new clients; to broaden and deepen geographical coverage; and to attract additional data, content and media talent and resources through direct recruitment, acquisition and/or merger."

Source:
Campaign UK

Follow us

Top news, insights and analysis every weekday

Sign up for Campaign Bulletins

Related Articles

Just Published

16 hours ago

40 Under 40 2024: Lana Zhang, Merkle

Zhang's visionary leadership, dedication to innovation, and contributions to marketing automation have established her as a cornerstone of the industry in China and beyond.

17 hours ago

What Chrome’s potential spin-off means for browsers ...

As the Department of Justice pushes for Google to divest Chrome, the ripple effects could redefine browser competition, shake up web standards, and disrupt the advertising ecosystem as we know it.

18 hours ago

It's time we stopped treating Gen AI like our dirty ...

All this heated discourse about AI in creativity misses a simple truth: This revolution isn't waiting for universal approval. It's already here—time to trade the resistance for renaissance.

18 hours ago

Publicis' Unilever win solidifies its strength in ...

Dentsu's Carat jumps the most in positioning, WPP's Mindshare sees the biggest fall, while Omnicom's PHD retains the overall lead.