Kantar Media Reports US Advertising Expenditures Increased 1.5% in the First Nine Months of 2011

NEW YORK – Total advertising expenditures in the first nine months of 2011 increased 1.5 percent from a year ago and finished the period at $104.7 billion, according to data released today by Kantar Media, the leading provider of strategic advertising and marketing information. Spending growth slowed during the third quarter and was up 0.4 percent compared to last year.

“The cautious optimism for the advertising market at the beginning of 2011 has been replaced by the statistical evidence of progressively slowing growth rates,” said Jon Swallen, SVP Research at Kantar Media North America. “From +4.1 percent in the first quarter, to +2.8 percent in the second quarter and now a barely palpable +0.4 percent for the July to September period. During Q3, an expanding number of the largest marketers became even more conservative with their ad budgets and these reductions have neutralized the healthy spending growth occurring among mid-sized advertisers.”

Measured Ad Spending By Media

Most forms of television had spending gains in the third quarter. Expenditures on cable networks increased 6.5 percent during Q3 as higher demand from Direct Response advertisers was offset by curtailed spending from auto manufacturers and restaurants. January-September outlays on cable TV rose 9.9 percent.

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Network TV registered its first quarterly gain of the year as Q3 expenditures inched ahead 0.2 percent on higher budgets from movie studios and consumer package goods marketers. Year-to-date expenditures were down 5.7 percent, primarily from the loss of marquee college football and basketball programming that moved to cable networks in the first quarter of 2011.

Ad spending in Spanish Language Television soared 18.0 percent during Q3 and Syndication TV was up 14.8 percent in the period. The only TV segment to lose ground was Spot TV, where expenditures sank 5.7 percent during July-September and were down 2.7 percent for the nine months. As expected, the 2011 Spot TV trend line is progressively lagging in comparison to last year’s bonanza that was fueled by political advertising money.

Within the Internet sector, display advertising expenditures jumped 15.8 percent during July-September and the gains were broadly distributed across top spending categories. However, measured investments in paid search declined 14.4 percent in Q3 on continuing reductions from insurance companies, legal services and medical care providers. For the first nine months of 2011, display spending increased 10.1 percent while paid search fell 2.1 percent.

After six months of modest growth, Consumer Magazine ad expenditures reversed course in Q3 and dropped 1.4 percent. Stable demand from the personal care, apparel, prescription drug and direct response categories was more than offset by steep reductions from food companies and auto manufacturers. Year-to-date spending for the medium has grown 2.2 percent.

Outdoor spending slowed during the third quarter but still registered gains of 3.2 percent for July-September and 8.6 percent for the nine months. Local service businesses, restaurants and education institutes continued to direct more money into the medium.

The pace of spending in Radio media remained soft but steady. Local Radio expenditures were up 2.0 percent in Q3 and have risen 2.2 percent year-to-date. National Spot Radio fell 2.3 percent in July-September and was off 1.9 percent for the first nine months of the year.

Local Newspapers, despite robust budgets from local auto dealers and an uptick in financial advertising, posted a 4.4 percent spending decline in Q3 and were down 3.9 percent year-to-date.

Percent Change in Measured Ad Spending1

 

MEDIA SECTOR
• Media Type

 (Sectors and types listed in rank order of spending)

Jan – Sept2011 vs. 2010 Jul-Sept2011 vs 2010
TELEVISION MEDIA 2.3% 3.2%
• Cable TV2 9.9% 6.5%
• Network TV -5.7% 0.2%
• Spot TV3 -2.7% -5.7%
• Spanish Language TV4 7.4% 18.0%
• Syndication – National 17.2% 14.8%
INTERNET MEDIA 2.8% -2.9%
• Paid Search5 -2.1% -14.4%
• Display 10.1% 15.8%
MAGAZINE MEDIA6 1.5% -1.2%
• Consumer Magazines 2.2% -1.4%
• B-to-B Magazines 1.1% 0.8%
• Sunday Magazines -6.1% -2.7%
• Local Magazines -2.4% -5.5%
• Spanish Language Magazines 24.5% 20.1%
NEWSPAPER MEDIA7 -3.8% -3.7%
• Local Newspapers -3.9% -4.4%
• National Newspapers -3.5% -0.3%
• Spanish Language Newspapers -1.1% 2.9%
RADIO MEDIA 1.2% 1.1%
• Local Radio 8 2.2% 2.0%
• National Spot Radio -1.9% -2.3%
• Network Radio 2.1% 2.9%
OUTDOOR 8.6% 3.2%
FSIs9 -6.4% -6.4%
TOTAL 1.5% 0.4%

Source: Kantar Media

1. Figures are based on the Kantar Media Stradegy™ multimedia ad expenditure database across all measured media, including: Network TV (5 networks); Spot TV (125 DMAs); Cable TV (71 networks); Syndication TV; Hispanic Network TV (4 networks); Consumer Magazines (204 publications); Sunday Magazines (8 publications); Local Magazines (29 publications); Hispanic Magazines (16 publications); Business-to-Business Magazines (308 publications); Local Newspapers (110 publications); National Newspapers (3 publications); Hispanic Newspapers (46 publications); Network Radio (5 networks); National Spot Radio (205 markets); Local Radio (32 markets); Internet search (Google search engine); Internet display (2,001 sites monitored at least one year); and Outdoor. Figures do not include public service announcements (PSA) or house advertising
2. Cable TV figures based on 67 English language networks and do not include any Hispanic cable networks
3. Spot TV figures based on 658 English language stations and do not include any Hispanic stations
4. Spanish Language TV includes 4 Hispanic broadcast networks, 4 Hispanic cable network and 71 local Hispanic TV stations
5. Internet search figures reflect paid activity on Google and are compiled from monthly data on Top 20,000 subdomains
6. Magazine media includes Publishers Information Bureau (PIB) data and reflect print editions of publications
7. Newspaper media figures reflect print editions of publications
8. Local Radio includes expenditures for 32 markets in the U.S.
9. FSI data represents distribution costs only

Measured Ad Spending By Advertiser

Spending among the ten largest advertisers in the first nine months of 2011 was $11,826.3 million, a 1.4 percent decline compared to a year ago. Among the Top 100 marketers, a diversified group accounting for more than two-fifths of all measured ad expenditures, year-to-date budgets fell 0.3 percent.

Procter & Gamble maintained its top-ranked position with spending of $2,127.2 million through September, down 5.6 percent compared to last year. In the July-September quarter, when many leading package goods marketers made deep cuts to their media budgets, P&G expenditures were nearly flat versus a year ago.

AT&T was the second largest advertiser for the nine month period with expenditures of $1,527.1 million, a decline of 3.5 percent. In the months immediately following the March 2011 announcement of its agreement to purchase T-Mobile, AT&T ad spending slowed sharply. As government approval of the deal became less certain and as T-Mobile preemptively hiked its own media budgets, AT&T began restoring ad spend during the third quarter. For all of Q3, its expenditures were off just 0.7 percent from a year ago.

At Verizon Communications, year-to-date expenditures were $1,177.6 million, a decrease of 18.0 percent and the largest percentage drop among the Top Ten marketers. Having cut budgets steadily since the beginning of 2010, Verizon spending rates are now being compared against lower levels of a year ago. This largely explains why Verizon expenditures in Q3 were down just 5.4 percent year-on-year.

The largest growth rate among the Top Ten marketers was posted by Chrysler, up 41.3 percent to $867.8 million for the first nine months of the year. The increase was driven by marketing introductions for several new or redesigned models. However, the pace of spending slowed during Q3 as these launch programs wound down and July-September expenditures finished 9.2 percent ahead of last year.

Rival automaker General Motors pursued a more restrained course and reduced its outlays by 12.2 percent during the first nine months of 2011, to $1,309.9 million. Q3 media budgets fell 11.1 percent. The proportion of GM’s ad budget earmarked towards passenger cars, as opposed to SUVs and pickups trucks, is pacing at its highest level in more than four years.

L’Oreal investments for the nine month period rose 22.6 percent to $948.3 million as the company expanded marketing support for the L’Oreal Paris, Maybelline and Garnier brand lines. Comcast (+18.9 percent, to $1,279.0 million) and Time Warner (+0.9 percent, to $893.1 million) also posted year-to-date spending gains, despite reducing their budgets in Q3.

Top Ten Advertisers Of January-September 20111

 

Rank

Jan-Sep

Company Jan-Sep 2011

($ Millions)

Jan-Sep 2010

($ Millions)

Jan-Sep

% Change

Jul-Sep

% Change

1 Procter & Gamble Co $2,127.2 $2,253.8 -5.6% -0.7%
2 AT&T Inc $1,527.1 $1,581.7 -3.5% -0.7%
3 General Motors Corp $1,309.9 $1,491.2 -12.2% -11.1%
4 Comcast Corp $1,279.0 $1,075.8 18.9% -6.1%
5 Verizon Communications $1,177.6 $1,436.6 -18.0% -5.4%
6 L’Oreal Sa $948.3 $773.6 22.6% 18.1%
7 Time Warner Inc $893.1 $885.3 0.9% -10.1%
8 Chrysler Group Llc $867.8 $614.2 41.3% 9.2%
9 Pfizer Inc $849.7 $900.4 -5.6% -11.9%
10 News Corp $846.6 $987.6 -14.3% -10.2%
TOTAL2 $11,826.3 $12,000.3 -1.4% -3.3%

Source: Kantar Media

1. Figures do not include FSI, House Ads or PSA activity
2. The sum of the individual companies can differ from the total shown due to rounding

Measured Ad Spending By Category

Expenditures for the ten largest categories grew 3.1 percent in the first nine months of 2011, to $59,523.6 million. For the July-September quarter, the aggregate increase was 1.8 percent and quarterly growth rates for seven of the ten categories trailed their year-to-date average, further evidence of the slowdown in ad spending.

Automotive was the top category with $9,908.4 million of spending during the nine month period, up 7.0 percent. However, the bulk of the gain came early in the year and from April through September automotive budgets have grown just 1 percent. The March earthquake and tsunami in Japan, coupled with monsoon flooding in Thailand, has had a ripple effect on U.S. auto advertising. These natural disasters disrupted production at Toyota and Honda and led to reduced advertising of their vehicles in the face of inventory shortages. With a tightened industry supply of new vehicles and less competition for sales, other manufacturers seized an opportunity to improve profit margins by scaling back on consumer incentives and reducing media budgets.

Local Services was the second largest category and tallied $7,144.2 million of media spending for the nine months. Year-to-date growth was up 7.2 percent and Q3 surpassed this level with an increase of 7.8 percent. This performance is consistent with the category’s weighting towards mid-sized advertisers, a segment that has been spending robustly throughout the year.

Category expenditures for Direct Response products advanced more than 10 percent during the July-September quarter and reached $4,698.5 million for the full nine months, up 3.9 percent versus a year ago. The Q3 gains suggest lower demand from full-price advertisers for the non-premium and run-of-station inventory which are the staple of DR marketers.

After an extended run-up, expenditure growth rates for consumer package goods categories have been retreating. For the January-September period, Food & Candy was down 2.6 percent to $4,838.1 million while ad spending for Personal Care Products slowed sharply in Q3 but still finished the nine months up 7.6 percent to $4,787.3 million.

The Telecom category continues to lose ground. Year-to date spending declined 4.9 percent to $6,405.1 million and Q3 expenditures tumbled 6.1 percent. The ongoing weakness within the wireless segment has now taken root among satellite TV operators, previously a reliable source of ad spending growth.

Top Ten Advertising Categories Of January-September 20111
Rank

Jan-Sep

Category Jan-Sep 2011

($ Millions)

Jan-Sep 2010

($ Millions)

Jan-Sep

% Change

Jul-Sep

% Change

1 Automotive $9,908.4 $9,262.6 7.0% 2.1%
•  (Manufacturers) ($6,089.3) ($5,854.8) (4.0%) (-3.8%)
•  (Dealers) ($3,819.1) ($3,407.7) (12.1%) (+11.3%)
2 Local Services $7,144.2 $6,665.6 7.2% 7.8%
3 Miscellaneous Retail2 $6,746.0 $6,536.0 3.2% 3.0%
4 Financial Services $6,655.7 $6,400.3 4.0% 2.4%
5 Telecom $6,405.1 $6,738.1 -4.9% -6.1%
6 Food & Candy $4,838.1 $4,967.6 -2.6% -5.7%
7 Personal Care Products $4,787.3 $4,451.1 7.6% 3.2%
8 Direct Response $4,698.5 $4,523.9 3.9% 10.6%
9 Restaurants $4,381.4 $4,251.1 3.1% 4.4%
10 Travel & Tourism $3,959.0 $3,927.4 0.8% -4.4%
TOTAL3 $59,523.6 $57,723.6 3.1% 1.8%

Source: Kantar Media

1. Figures do not include FSI or PSA activity
2. Miscellaneous Retail excludes these retail segments: Department Stores, Home Furnishing & Building Supply Stores
3. The sum of the individual categories can differ from the total shown due to rounding

Top Spending Advertisers Within Select Media

The top ten TV advertisers spent $7,284.5 million in the medium during the first nine months of 2011, up 0.1 percent from a year ago. This group accounted for 15.0 percent of total TV expenditures by all advertisers.

Top Ten Television Advertisers Of January-September 20111
Rank Company Jan-Sept 2011

($Millions)

% Change

vs Year Ago

1 Procter & Gamble Co $1,221.1 -6.9%
2 AT&T Inc $1,075.8 -2.7%
3 General Mills Inc $616.1 2.5%
4 Verizon Communications Inc $725.8 -15.0%
5 General Motors Corp $787.0 -6.4%
6 Comcast Corp $685.6 20.5%
7 Berkshire Hathaway Inc $464.8 6.5%
8 McDonalds Corp $553.1 4.2%
9 Chrysler Group Llc $637.8 38.8%
10 Toyota Motor Corp $517.3 -8.9%
TOTAL2 $7,284.5 0.1%

Source: Kantar Media

1 Figures do not include PSA activity
2 The sum of the individual companies can differ from the total shown due to rounding

The ten largest Internet advertisers invested a total of $1,809.3 million in paid search and display campaigns, up 11.1 percent versus a year ago. Despite fragmentation on the web, the group accounted for 10.8 percent share of all Internet ad dollars. The three leading wireless telecom providers each made the list along with a pair of financial advertisers.

Top Ten Internet Advertisers Of January-September 2011

(Display + Paid Search)

Rank Company Jan-Sept 2011

($Millions)

% Change vs

Year Ago

1 General Motors Corp $230.4 46.7%
2 Experian Group LTD $225.1 -5.4%
3 Progressive Corp $217.9 73.3%
4 Verizon Communications Inc $198.9 44.1%
5 IAC/Interactivecorp $198.4 11.0%
6 AT&T Inc $186.8 11.5%
7 Comcast Corp $162.5 32.2%
8 Amazon.com Inc $135.5 -15.8%
9 Procter & Gamble Co $130.9 10.2%
10 Sprint Nextel Corp $123.1 -44.3%
TOTAL1 $1,809.3 +11.1%

Source: Kantar Media

1. The sum of the individual companies can differ from the total shown due to rounding

The top ten magazine advertisers in January-September 2011 invested $2,703.9 million in the medium, a decrease of 2.8 percent. As a proportion of total magazine ad spending by all advertisers, the top ten accounted for 17.1 percent.

Top Ten Magazine Advertisers Of January-September 20111
Rank Company Jan-June 2011

($Millions)

% Change vs

Year Ago

1 Procter & Gamble Co $760.0 -4.8%
2 L’Oreal Sa $465.4 25.5%
3 Pfizer Inc $257.8 25.9%
4 Johnson & Johnson $198.2 -16.8%
5 Time Warner Inc $184.5 13.8%
6 Nestle Sa $177.9 -19.9%
7 Kraft Foods Inc $176.2 -38.9%
8 Joh A Benckiser Gmbh $174.7 18.8%
9 General Motors Corp $157.2 -43.7%
10 AstraZeneca Plc $152.0 117.0%
TOTAL2 $2,703.9 -2.8%

Source: Kantar Media

1. Figures exclude Business-to-Business publications
2. The sum of the individual companies can differ from the total shown due to rounding

About Kantar Media

Kantar Media provides strategic advice and competitive intelligence to the world’s leading brands, publishers, agencies and industry bodies, helping them navigate and succeed in a rapidly evolving media industry. This includes analysis of paid media opportunities; counsel on brand reputation, corporate management and consumer engagement through owned media; and, evaluating consumers’ reactions in earned media. Kantar Media provides clients with a broad range of insights from audience research, competitive intelligence, vital consumer behavior and digital insights, to marketing effectiveness and online influence. Our experts currently work with 22,000 companies tracking 3 million brands in 50 countries. www.KantarMediaNA.com.