UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
_____________________
FORM 6-K
____________________
Report of Foreign Private Issuer
Pursuant to Rule 13a-16 or 15d-16
under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
For the Month of February 2022
Commission File Number: 001-38303
______________________
WPP plc
(Translation of registrant's name into English)
________________________
Sea Containers, 18 Upper Ground
London, United Kingdom SE1 9GL
(Address of principal executive offices)
_________________________
Indicate
by check mark whether the registrant files or will file annual
reports under cover of Form 20-F or Form 40-F:
Form
20-F X Form 40-F
___
Indicate
by check mark if the registrant is submitting the Form 6-K in paper
as permitted by Regulation S-T Rule 101(b)(1): ___
Note: Regulation S-T Rule 101(b)(1) only permits the
submission in paper of a Form 6-K if submitted solely to provide an
attached annual report to security holders.
Indicate
by check mark if the registrant is submitting the Form 6-K in paper
as permitted by Regulation S-T Rule 101(b)(7): ___
Note: Regulation S-T Rule 101(b)(7) only permits the
submission in paper of a Form 6-K if submitted to furnish a report
or other document that the registrant foreign private issuer must
furnish and make public under the laws of the jurisdiction in which
the registrant is incorporated, domiciled or legally organized (the
registrant’s “home country”), or under the rules
of the home country exchange on which the registrant’s
securities are traded, as long as the report or other document is
not a press release, is not required to be and has not been
distributed to the registrant’s security holders, and, if
discussing a material event, has already been the subject of a Form
6-K submission or other Commission filing on EDGAR.
Forward-Looking Statements
In
connection with the provisions of the Private Securities Litigation
Reform Act of 1995 (the “Reform Act”), WPP plc and its
subsidiaries (the “Company”) may include
forward-looking statements (as defined in the Reform Act) in oral
or written public statements issued by or on behalf of the Company.
These forward-looking statements may include, among other things,
plans, objectives, projections and anticipated future economic
performance based on assumptions and the like that are subject to
risks and uncertainties. As such, actual results or outcomes may
differ materially from those discussed in the forward-looking
statements. Important factors that may cause actual results to
differ include but are not limited to: the unanticipated loss of a
material client or key personnel, delays or reductions in client
advertising budgets, shifts in industry rates of compensation,
regulatory compliance costs or litigation, natural disasters or
acts of terrorism, the Company’s exposure to changes in the
values of major currencies other than the UK pound sterling
(because a substantial portion of its revenues are derived and
costs incurred outside of the United Kingdom) and the overall level
of economic activity in the Company’s major markets (which
varies depending on, among other things, regional, national and
international political and economic conditions and government
regulations in the world’s advertising markets). In addition,
you should consider the risks described in Item 3D, captioned
“Risk Factors” in the Company’s Form 20-F for the
year ended 31 December 2019, which could also cause actual results
to differ from forward-looking information. In light of these and
other uncertainties, the forward-looking statements included in the
oral or written public statements should not be regarded as a
representation by the Company that the Company’s plans and
objectives will be achieved.
The
Company undertakes no obligation to update or revise any such
forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information,
future events or otherwise.
EXHIBIT INDEX
Exhibit No.
|
Description
|
1
|
2021 Preliminary Results dated 24 February 2022, prepared by WPP
plc.
|
WPP PLC ("WPP")
2021 Preliminary Results
Very strong growth driven by demand for digital services, ecommerce
and technology; exceptional new business performance; over £1
billion returned to shareholders; sustained momentum into
2022
Key figures – continuing operations
£
million
|
2021
|
|
+/(-)%
|
|
Revenue
|
12,801
|
6.7
|
13.3
|
12,003
|
Revenue
less pass-through costs
|
10,397
|
6.5
|
12.1
|
9,762
|
|
|
|
|
|
Reported:
|
|
|
|
|
Operating
profit/(loss)
|
1,229
|
n/m
|
-
|
(2,278)
|
Profit/(loss)
before tax
|
951
|
n/m
|
|
(2,791)
|
Diluted
EPS (p)
|
52.5
|
n/m
|
-
|
(243.0)
|
Dividends
per share (p)
|
31.2
|
30.0
|
-
|
24.0
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Operating
profit
|
1,494
|
18.5
|
26.8
|
1,261
|
Operating
profit margin
|
14.4%
|
1.5pt*
|
1.7pt*
|
12.9%
|
Profit
before tax
|
1,365
|
31.1
|
-
|
1,041
|
Diluted
EPS (p)
|
78.5
|
30.6
|
-
|
60.1
|
*
Margin points
Full year and Q4 financial highlights
▪
FY continuing operations reported revenue +6.7%, LFL revenue
+13.3%
▪
FY LFL revenue less pass-through costs +12.1%; Q4
+10.8%
▪
2-year FY LFL revenue less pass-through costs +2.9%; Q4
+3.6%
▪
Q4 LFL revenue less pass-through costs by major market: US +11.7%,
UK +9.9%, Germany +3.4%, Greater China +13.6%, Australia
-2.2%
▪
FY headline operating margin 14.4%, up 1.7pt LFL on prior year with
strong top-line growth and efficiency savings supporting
significant reinvestment in incentives
▪
Reported diluted EPS 52.5 pence; headline diluted EPS up 30.6% to
78.5 pence
▪
Free cash flow of £1.3 billion
▪
Adjusted net debt at 31 December 2021 £0.9 billion, after
significant growth investments and shareholder returns, reflecting
very strong cash generation
Strategic progress, shareholder returns and 2022
guidance
▪
Improving business mix: growth areas of experience, commerce and
technology around 38% of revenue less pass-through costs in Global
Integrated Agencies ex GroupM
▪
GroupM very strong: 2021 LFL revenue less pass-through costs
+16.1%
▪
Continued investment in client offer: creation of Choreograph,
acquisitions including Sard Verbinnen, Satalia, Cloud Commerce and
Numerator (Kantar)
▪
Breadth and depth of capabilities resonating well with clients:
market-leading $8.7 billion5 of net new
business won, including global Coca-Cola
account
▪
Strong recognition of creativity and effectiveness: most awarded
company at the 2021 Cannes Lions Festival; ranked number one across
all three WARC rankings for media, creative and
effectiveness
▪
Transformation programme on track: around £245 million gross
savings, mainly in property, procurement and simplification; good
progress on shared services and IT transformation
▪
Final dividend of 18.7 pence proposed, up 33.6%; over £1
billion returned to shareholders in 2021 through share buybacks and
dividends
▪
2022 guidance: LFL revenue less pass-through costs growth around
5%; headline operating margin up around 50 bps; trade working
capital expected to be flat year-on-year; £800 million share
buyback, of which £129 million already completed; tax rate of
around 25.5% in 2022
Mark Read, Chief Executive Officer, WPP:
“It
has been an outstanding year for WPP. Our top-line growth, driven
by strong demand for our services in digital marketing, media,
ecommerce and technology, has resulted in our fastest organic
growth for over 20 years. As a result, we are two years ahead of
our plan, hitting our 2023 revenue target in 2021.
“As
clients seek to accelerate their growth and transform how they
reach customers, the depth, breadth and global scale of our offer -
which combines creativity with technology and data, through
Choreograph, and the largest global media platform in GroupM - is
proving its value for existing and new clients. The talent,
dynamism and commitment of our people have also shone through. Our
extensive partnership with The Coca-Cola Company, the expansion of
our work with Google and the continuation of our longstanding
relationship with Unilever demonstrate the value that three of the
world’s leading marketing organisations place in
WPP.
“We
have made substantial strategic progress, creating the
world’s leading board-level communications firm through the
merger of Finsbury Glover Hering and Sard Verbinnen, and acquiring
capabilities in AI, commerce and technology services to leverage
across all of WPP for future growth. Cash generation continues to
be very strong, underpinned by efficiencies achieved in our
transformation programme, allowing us to make significant
investments in our offer and reward our people for their huge
contribution, while returning over £1 billion in cash to
shareholders through dividends and share buybacks.
“We
look forward to 2022 with confidence. We are guiding to strong
top-line growth, improving profitability and continued investment
in our people and services.”
For
further information:
Investors and analysts
Peregrine
Riviere
Caitlin
Holt
Fran
Butera (US)
|
+44
7909 907193
+44
7392 280178
+1 914
484 1198
|
Media
Chris
Wade
Richard
Oldworth.
Buchanan
Communications
|
+44 20
7282 4600
+44 20
7466 5000
+44
7710 130 634
|
wpp.com/investors
|
|
Overview and strategic progress
Market environment
2021 was an extraordinary year for the global advertising industry.
Growth in spend was supported by a stronger-than-expected
macroeconomic environment, a consumption boost from pent-up saving
and structural growth in digital channels. According to GroupM
estimates, global advertising spend6 grew by
22.5% in 2021, a considerably better outcome than the 12.3%
forecast in December 2020.
The pace of growth in digital advertising has continued to
accelerate, reflecting the seismic shift in the way people consume
media. GroupM estimates that global digital advertising spend grew
by 30.5% in 2021, and now accounts for 64.4% of total spend, up
from 59.3% in 2020.
Within digital, one of the big drivers of growth has been the
explosion in ecommerce. The pandemic accelerated a widespread shift
towards shopping online, amplifying the number of opportunities for
brands to connect to consumers on digital channels, while also
levelling the playing field for challenger brands. GroupM estimates
that global retail ecommerce advanced 20.4% in 2021.
Two other factors are playing a significant role in the growth in
advertising spend. New, app-based or digital-first businesses are
able to afford to invest a greater proportion of their income into
marketing to grow scale fast because they lack the physical
presence (and associated costs such as rent) of traditional
businesses. In turn, more traditional advertisers such as consumer
packaged goods companies are investing in retail and commerce media
– engaging with customers closer to the digital point of
sale. This is blurring the lines between the marketing budget and
the sales promotion budget, significantly growing the addressable
market for marketing services businesses.
By geography, the UK, US and China remain the largest contributors
to growth in advertising spend, spurred by their exposure to
digital. By medium, TV had a strong year with global advertising
spend on TV growing by 11.7% in 2021, as advertisers invested in
their brand-building strategies. It also reflects the growth of
connected TV and the increased targeting and measurement potential
this brings to advertisers. Despite restrictions on mobility, spend
on outdoor also grew, supported by the increasing availability of
digital screens and programmatic options. Audio also saw some
growth reinforced by podcasting, while cinema has been slower to
recover. Print was the only medium to decline, reflecting the
trends in circulation.
We have seen the acceleration of two significant trends, in data
and purpose, that we expect to continue. The shift to digital and
omnichannel commerce is driving companies to increase investment in
data-driven marketing, which requires better (and
privacy-compliant) customer data as well as marketing technology
transformation. We are also witnessing very strong demand for
strategic advice on purpose, sustainability and broader social
issues. 85% of consumers believe that brands should represent
something more than just profit7, and brands
perceived as having a high positive impact on society are estimated
to be more than twice as valuable as brands that are
not8.
Performance and progress
Revenue was £12.8 billion, up 6.7% from £12.0 billion in
2020, and up 13.3% like-for-like. Revenue less pass-through costs
was £10.4 billion, up 6.5% from £9.8 billion in 2020, and
up 12.1% like-for-like.
We have seen an exceptional recovery in the year, with LFL growth
in revenue less pass-through costs across all our business sectors
and major markets. On a two-year basis we are 2.9% ahead of 2019
performance in terms of LFL revenue less pass-through costs,
reflecting the breadth and depth of our offer. Client demand has
been strong, particularly for ecommerce services and in commerce
media. GroupM’s commerce billings increased 41% year-on-year
in 2021 while the proportion of digital billings has grown to 43%
in 2021 from 41% in 2020. Revenue less pass-through costs from
higher-growth areas of our offer in experience, commerce and
technology increased to around 38% of our Global Integrated
Agencies, excluding GroupM, compared to 35% in 2019.
Clients and partners
By sector, we have had continued momentum in technology, healthcare
& pharma and consumer packaged goods which together represent
53% of our revenue less pass-through costs for designated clients.
On a two-year basis, these sectors recorded like-for-like growth of
15.1%, 10.5% and 5.7% respectively. At the client level, we also
saw widespread evidence of investing in marketing for growth, with
18 out of our top 30 clients showing double-digit two-year growth
in 2021.
We won $8.7 billion of net new billings in 2021, including
important retentions of longstanding media partnerships with
Unilever and Bayer, demonstrating the strength of our client
relationships. We also expanded our relationship with Google to
handle the entirety of their media spend globally. Over the year we
also won new assignments from AstraZeneca, Beiersdorf,
L’Oréal, Sainsbury’s, TD Bank and Under Armour
among others.
We are proud to have been appointed The Coca-Cola Company’s
Global Marketing Network Partner. This is a partnership of
unprecedented scale in the industry – covering creative,
media and data across more than 200 countries and territories
– and reflects the breadth and reach of WPP across the
globe.
We continued to deepen and broaden our relationships with
established and emerging technology partners globally, to build our
expertise and develop leading services for clients. For example, we
are a Global Partner with Google, with nearly 6,000 of our people
now certified as Google Marketing Platform consultants; through
Wavemaker, we achieved a global first through our access to Amazon
Advertising’s Overlapping Audiences API; and we launched a
ground-breaking global agency partnership with TikTok giving our
agencies early access to advertising products in development and
collaborating with a diverse network of creators.
Creativity
Underpinning our success this year is the strength of our creative
work. We were honoured to be recognised as the most-awarded company
at the 2021 Cannes Lions Festival, with winners representing 38
different countries. Each of our global integrated creative
agencies won a Grand Prix. In addition, WPP topped WARC’s
2021 global agency rankings across all three categories –
creative, media and effectiveness – reflecting the breadth of
our capabilities.
The metaverse presents a new frontier of creative opportunities for
brands to engage with consumers, through virtual worlds connecting
gaming, augmented and virtual reality, NFTs and the blockchain.
Clients are seizing the opportunity and seeking our partnership to
experiment in ways to bring experiences to life in this new
channel. Our agencies are already delivering metaverse projects for
clients including Wendy’s, Under Armour and Pfizer. To take
the ideas to the next level, Hogarth recently announced the launch
of The Metaverse Foundry, a global team of over 700 creatives,
producers, visual artists and technologists focused on delivering
the most creative and compelling metaverse experiences for our
clients.
Investments for growth
During the year we made a number of acquisitions, including
Satalia, a market-leading artificial intelligence business; Cloud
Commerce Group, a technology company helping brands to market, sell
and deliver products across ecommerce platforms globally; and Made
Thought, a London-based branding and design agency. We also merged
Finsbury Glover Hering and Sard Verbinnen, a transaction which has
created a leading global strategic communications firm. Kantar, in
which we own a 40% stake, acquired Numerator, a technology-driven
consumer and market intelligence company.
These acquisitions are aligned with our accelerated growth strategy
and focused M&A approach to build on existing capabilities in
growth areas. For example, Satalia’s highly specialised
artificial intelligence capabilities have been leveraged across WPP
to solve for a range of complex optimisation problems. Alongside
applications for client engagements, the tools have been applied to
internal opportunities including cross-platform media optimisation,
workforce utilisation and content intelligence. The transaction has
already added significant value both to clients and internal WPP
product development.
We also stepped up organic investment to drive significant
long-term growth opportunities. The main areas of focus for this
investment are the formation and development of Choreograph to
unify and accelerate our data capabilities, the creation of a
commerce-as-a-service platform to complement our broader expertise
in commerce, and further innovation in our market-leading
programmatic and connected TV businesses, Xaxis and
Finecast.
Choreograph is working to design innovative ways to future-proof
our clients’ approach to data. We believe there will not be a
single solution to addressing the challenges presented by the
deprecation of third-party cookies and other identifiers. As such
we are exploring and investing in multiple privacy-preserving
solutions including machine learning graphs, identity networks,
cohort analysis and the use of contextual signals. Choreograph has
already played a central role in the retention of the Unilever
media account and the Coca-Cola partnership.
Transformation programme
Good progress has been made on our transformation programme,
designed to simplify WPP, build greater collaboration, drive
efficiency and free up funds for reinvestment in growth. We remain
comfortably on target to achieve our goal of £600 million
annual cost efficiencies by 2025, with around £245 million of
gross annual savings achieved so far against a 2019
base.
The transformation of our property estate continues, despite the
constraints of COVID, with a further nine campuses opened in 2021,
taking the total to 30. We aim to complete at least 65 campuses,
housing more than 85,000 people, by 2025. In procurement, we are
beginning to consolidate our spend more effectively, improving
terms for our agencies with our purchasing scale. Telecoms savings
and software licenses were areas of significant efficiency in 2021.
In terms of simplification, the combination of sub-scale agencies
in smaller markets is leading to a significant improvement in
performance; we have removed around 500 legal entities from the
group structure, with a similar figure targeted for 2022; and we
have acquired the minorities in WPP AUNZ, taking us to 100%
ownership to improve control and governance of our fifth largest
geography.
Across IT, Finance and HR transformation, significant groundwork
has been undertaken as we modernise and move to a more standardised
approach, with target operating models approved for all three. In
IT, transformation plans including network infrastructure, cloud
acceleration and platform rationalisation are all on track. The
shared services programme is progressing, with a significant
portion of finance processes migrated from the UK to Mumbai, and
new deployments in the Middle East, Asia and Latin America. We
have, however, experienced some delays to the deployment of
Workday, our new ERP platform, but we are confident of meeting our
revised timetable starting in the first half of 2022.
Purpose and ESG
WPP’s purpose is to use the power of creativity to build
better futures for our people, our planet, our clients and our
communities. We outlined our sustainability strategy at an ESG
event for stakeholders in June 2021. Since then, we have continued
to make good progress in our commitments across each pillar of this
purpose statement.
People
Our success is powered by our people. This year we have launched
and developed a number of initiatives across our agencies to foster
an open and inclusive culture. The pilot of our Inclusive
Leadership in a Hybrid World programme equipped 1,000 managers
across five companies and four countries with a roadmap to
becoming a more inclusive leader. Our long-term goal is to make
this learning experience available to everyone across WPP, starting
with 40,000 managers globally in 2022.
As part of our commitment to ensure the best possible culture, we
also launched our Mental Health Allies programme, providing mental
health training to 500 leaders, HR professionals and employees
across the UK and US. We will expand into more regions in
2022.
With the support of our first company-wide LGBTQ+ community, WPP
Unite, we developed the LGBTQ+ Inclusive Marketing programme, to
equip our people with the knowledge, skills and resources to ensure
more inclusive marketing. WPP Unite was spearheaded in the UK and
US and will expand to other regions. We also joined the Business
Coalition for the Equality Act and were named among the Best Places
to Work for LGBTQ+ Equality by the Human Rights Campaign for the
second consecutive year.
We continue to focus on driving greater gender balance throughout
the company with women now representing more than half of our
senior managers and, at the most senior level of our company, women
now make up 39%. Fourteen leaders from across WPP were named in the
2021 HERoes Women Role Model Lists for their work driving change in
gender diversity, and we are now ranked in the top 10 for gender
representation among senior leaders and at board level in the FTSE
Women Leaders Review. In addition, WPP was recognised in the
Bloomberg Gender-Equality Index for the fourth consecutive
year.
We know we have more to do to ensure WPP represents the diversity
of the societies in which we operate, which is why we are placing
diversity, equity and inclusion at the centre of our recruitment
and development processes, using analytics to provide a more
inclusive employee experience. We have formed partnerships with
leading inclusion and diversity organisations such as the
Unstereotype Alliance, The Valuable 500 and the LAGRANT Foundation.
We are also funding a number of local initiatives to advance racial
equity, focusing on developing skills and increasing interest in
joining our industry.
To help lower the barriers to entry into the creative industry we
launched our second NextGen Leaders series. Built with inclusion at
its core, this cohort comprised 1,400 participants (50% of
participants in the US & UK identified as Black, Asian or
LatinX and 60% identified as female).
As part of our Racial Equity Programme, in June 2021 we invited our
global network of agencies to apply to receive resources to create
and run innovative and impactful programmes to advance racial
equity. Based on the ideas and initiatives that were felt to align
most closely with WPP’s purpose and hold the greatest
potential to effect change, we made the first nine grants.
Supported projects include Life Through the Eyes of the UK Black
Community, a new race equity organisation with a unique focus on
dismantling all aspects of racism faced by Black people in the UK;
and SOMA+, a platform focused on expanding the professional
knowledge of Black, Indigenous, and low-income students in
Brazil.
In addition, WPP committed in June 2020 to match personal donations
by employees to several non-profit organisations up to $1,000 per
person, to a total of $1 million.
Planet
Earlier in the year we made an industry-leading commitment to
reduce carbon emissions from our own operations to net zero by 2025
and across our supply chain by 2030, including media buying –
an industry first. Supporting this we have committed to equally
ambitious carbon emission reduction targets in line with climate
science, and validated by the Science Based Targets initiative, to
reduce our absolute Scope 1 and 2 emissions by at least 84% by 2025
and reduce Scope 3 emissions by at least 50% by 2030, both from a
2019 base year.
In November 2021 WPP successfully amended and supplemented the $2.5
billion revolving credit facility to link the margin on the
facility to specific sustainability measures, an important first
milestone in WPP’s journey to embed its carbon reduction
targets and broader sustainability commitments into its financing
arrangements.
Engaging with rating agencies and benchmarking organisations is key
to holding ourselves accountable for our progress. We are delighted
that the Carbon Disclosure Project has upgraded our ESG score to an
A- in their 2021 ratings, reflecting the ambition of our new net
zero strategy, emissions reductions targets and strengthened
governance.
Clients
We have supported many of our clients with their own sustainability
goals. For example, we helped to design the world’s first
carbon-neutral TV (Sky), designed and created an immersive
experience on the plastic crisis in our oceans (SC Johnson) and
launched an AI-powered campaign supporting local businesses across
India for Diwali (Mondelez). Demand for advice on brand purpose,
and support on everything from environmental product design to
recycling and changing customer behaviour is a major driver of
growth for a number of our agencies.
Communities
In partnership with the WHO Foundation, we created and delivered
the $5 vaccine campaign, encouraging people across the globe to
spend the price of a coffee on a donation to fund COVID-19 vaccines
for lower-income countries. We also donated 10,000 vaccines on
behalf of our clients and matched every vaccine bought by
employees. Since the start of the pandemic, we have been proud to
partner with the WHO to produce public awareness campaigns to help
limit the spread and impact of COVID-19 which have reached tens of
millions of people across 167 countries in more than 20
languages.
Outlook for 2022
WPP is
entering 2022 with a strong balance sheet, good momentum from new
business wins, and a comprehensive client offer.
Our
guidance for 2022 is as follows:
▪
Like-for-like
revenue less pass-through costs growth of around 5%
▪
Headline operating
margin improvement of around 50 bps, excluding the impacts of
M&A and foreign exchange
▪
Effective tax rate
(measured as headline tax as a % of headline profit before tax) of
around 25.5%
▪
Capex £350-400
million, with around £100 million relating to ERP system
deployment previously included in capex guidance now included in
restructuring costs
▪
Trade working
capital expected to be flat year-on-year
▪
Current foreign
exchange rates imply around a 0.5% drag on reported revenue less
pass-through costs from the movement in sterling
year-on-year
▪
We also anticipate
mergers and acquisitions will add 0.5-1.0% to revenue less
pass-through costs growth
▪
Given our low
leverage and continued strong cash generation, we expect to execute
around £800 million of share buybacks in 2022, of which
£129 million has already been completed
Medium-term guidance
At our
Capital Markets Day in December 2020, we set out our new
medium-term financial targets that will allow us to invest in
talent, incentives and technology, improve our competitive position
and deliver sustainable long-term growth. These
remain:
▪
3-4% annual growth
in revenue less pass-through costs from 2023, including M&A
benefit of 0.5-1.0% annually
▪
15.5-16.0% headline
operating margin in 2023
▪
Dividend: intention
to grow annually with a pay-out ratio around 40% of headline
diluted EPS
▪
Average adjusted
net debt/EBITDA maintained in the range 1.5-1.75x
Financial results
Unaudited headline income statement:
|
2021
|
|
+/(-) %
reported
|
+/(-)
%
∆
LFL
|
Continuing operations
|
|
|
|
|
Revenue
|
12,801
|
12,003
|
6.7
|
13.3
|
Revenue
less pass-through costs
|
10,397
|
9,762
|
6.5
|
12.1
|
Operating
profit
|
1,494
|
1,261
|
18.5
|
26.8
|
Operating
profit margin %
|
14.4%
|
12.9%
|
1.5pt
|
1.7pt
|
Income
from associates
|
86
|
10
|
n/m
|
|
PBIT
|
1,580
|
1,271
|
24.3
|
|
Net
finance costs
|
(215)
|
(230)
|
(6.6)
|
|
Profit
before tax
|
1,365
|
1,041
|
31.1
|
|
Tax
|
(328)
|
(240)
|
36.7
|
|
Profit
after tax
|
1,037
|
801
|
29.5
|
|
Non-controlling
interests
|
(83)
|
(59)
|
40.9
|
|
Profit
attributable to shareholders
|
954
|
742
|
28.6
|
|
Diluted
EPS
|
78.5p
|
60.1p
|
30.6
|
|
Reconciliation of operating profit/(loss) to headline operating
profit:
£
million
|
2021
|
2020
|
Continuing operations
|
|
|
Operating profit/(loss)
|
1,229
|
(2,278)
|
Amortisation
and impairment of acquired intangible assets
|
98
|
89
|
Goodwill
impairment
|
2
|
2,823
|
Losses/(gains)
on disposal of investments and subsidiaries
|
11
|
(8)
|
Gains
on remeasurement of equity interests arising from a change in scope
of ownership
|
-
|
(1)
|
Investment
and other impairment (reversals)/charges
|
(43)
|
296
|
Litigation
settlement
|
21
|
26
|
Restructuring
and transformation costs
|
146
|
81
|
Restructuring
costs in relation to COVID-19
|
30
|
233
|
Headline operating profit
|
1,494
|
1,261
|
Reported
billings were £50.7 billion, up 8.0%, and up 14.4%
like-for-like.
Reported
revenue from continuing operations was up 6.7% at
£12.8 billion.
Revenue on a constant currency basis was up 11.6% compared with
last year. Net changes from acquisitions, disposals and other
adjustments10 had a negative impact of 1.7% on
growth.
Like-for-like
revenue growth for 2021, excluding the impact of currency,
acquisitions and disposals, and the other adjustments, was
13.3%.
Reported
revenue less pass-through costs was up 6.5%, and up 11.5% on a
constant currency basis. Excluding the impact of acquisitions and
disposals and the other adjustments, like-for-like growth was
12.1%. In the fourth quarter, like-for-like revenue less
pass-through costs was up 10.8%.
Regional review
Revenue analysis
£
million
|
2021
|
2020
|
+/(-) %
reported
|
+/(-) %
LFL
|
N. America
|
4,494
|
4,465
|
0.7
|
9.4
|
United Kingdom
|
1,867
|
1,637
|
14.0
|
15.0
|
W. Cont Europe
|
2,786
|
2,442
|
14.1
|
19.2
|
|
3,654
|
3,459
|
5.6
|
13.3
|
Total Group
|
12,801
|
12,003
|
6.7
|
13.3
|
Revenue less pass-through costs analysis
£
million
|
2021
|
2020
|
+/(-) %
reported
|
+/(-) %
LFL
|
N. America
|
3,849
|
3,744
|
2.8
|
9.7
|
United Kingdom
|
1,414
|
1,234
|
14.6
|
15.0
|
W. Cont Europe
|
2,226
|
2,019
|
10.2
|
14.5
|
AP, LA, AME, CEE
|
2,908
|
2,765
|
5.2
|
12.3
|
Total Group
|
10,397
|
9,762
|
6.5
|
12.1
|
Headline operating profit analysis
£
million
|
2021
|
%
margin*
|
2020
|
%
margin*
|
N. America
|
656
|
17.0
|
612
|
16.3
|
United
Kingdom
|
181
|
12.8
|
138
|
11.2
|
W Cont. Europe
|
289
|
13.0
|
199
|
9.8
|
AP, LA, AME, CEE
|
368
|
12.7
|
312
|
11.3
|
Total Group
|
1,494
|
14.4
|
1,261
|
12.9
|
*
Headline operating profit as a percentage of revenue less
pass-through costs
North America like-for-like revenue less pass-through costs
was up 11.4% in the final quarter, and up 5.1% on a two-year basis.
The USA continued to grow at a double-digit rate, led by GroupM,
VMLY&R and Hogarth, and Canada also performed strongly. On a
full year basis, like-for-like revenue less pass-through costs in
North America was up 9.7%, and up 3.3% over two years.
United Kingdom like-for-like revenue less pass-through costs
was up 9.9% in the final quarter, and up 1.8% on a two-year basis.
AKQA Group and VMLY&R were the strongest performers. On a full
year basis, like-for-like revenue less pass-through costs was up
15.0%, and up 2.9% over two years.
Western Continental Europe like-for-like revenue less
pass-through costs was up 7.9% in the final quarter, and up 3.7% on
a two-year basis. The strongest performers in the period were
Italy, the Netherlands and France. On a full year basis,
like-for-like revenue less pass-through costs was up 14.5%, and up
5.2% over two years.
In Asia
Pacific, Latin America, Africa & the Middle East and Central
& Eastern Europe, like-for-like revenue less
pass-through costs was up 12.5% in the final quarter, and up 2.6%
on a two-year basis. Latin America was boosted by a very strong
performance in Brazil, while Asia Pacific continued to be
negatively impacted by COVID-related restrictions in Australia. On
a full year basis, like-for-like revenue less pass-through costs
was up 12.3%, and up 0.7% over two years.
Business sector review
During
2020, we announced that we would bring together Grey and AKQA under
the AKQA Group, and we brought Geometry and GTB into VMLY&R,
and International Healthcare into VMLY&R and Ogilvy. As a
result AKQA Group, Geometry, GTB and International Healthcare are
now reported within Global Integrated Agencies, having previously
been reported within Specialist Agencies. Prior year figures have
been re-presented to reflect these changes.
Revenue analysis
£
million
|
2021
|
2020
|
+/(-) %
reported
|
+/(-) %
LFL
|
Global
Integrated Agencies
|
10,836
|
10,266
|
5.6
|
12.6
|
Public
Relations
|
959
|
893
|
7.4
|
12.6
|
Specialist
Agencies
|
1,006
|
844
|
19.1
|
22.5
|
Total
Group
|
12,801
|
12,003
|
6.7
|
13.3
|
Revenue less pass-through costs analysis
£
million
|
2021
|
2020
|
+/(-) %
reported
|
+/(-) %
LFL
|
Global
Integrated Agencies
|
8,638
|
8,194
|
5.4
|
11.3
|
Public
Relations
|
910
|
854
|
6.5
|
11.5
|
Specialist
Agencies
|
849
|
714
|
19.0
|
21.8
|
Total
Group
|
10,397
|
9,762
|
6.5
|
12.1
|
Headline operating profit analysis
£
million
|
2021
|
%
margin*
|
2020
|
%
margin*
|
Global
Int. Agencies
|
1,216
|
14.1
|
1,060
|
12.9
|
Public Relations
|
143
|
15.7
|
142
|
16.5
|
Specialist Agencies
|
135
|
15.9
|
59
|
8.3
|
Total Group
|
1,494
|
14.4
|
1,261
|
12.9
|
*
Headline operating profit as a percentage of revenue less
pass-through costs
Global Integrated Agencies like-for-like revenue less
pass-through costs was up 10.0% in the final quarter, and up 3.1%
on a two-year basis. GroupM, which represented 38% of WPP’s
revenue less pass-through costs in the fourth quarter, was up 12.3%
like-for-like. The other integrated agencies all recorded broadly
similar levels of growth. For the full year, like-for-like revenue
less pass-through costs for the segment was up 11.3%, and up 2.5%
over two years.
Public Relations like-for-like revenue less pass-through
costs was up 15.1% in the final quarter, and up 10.4% on a two-year
basis. BCW and H+K Strategies continued to grow strongly. In
October, we announced the merger of Finsbury Glover Hering with
Sard Verbinnen to create a leading global strategic communications
firm. For the full year, like-for-like revenue less pass-through
costs for the segment was up 11.5%, and up 7.0% over two
years.
Specialist Agencies like-for-like revenue less pass-through
costs was up 13.9% in the final quarter, and up 4.1% on a two-year
basis. We continued to see
strong demand from clients across most of our businesses, although
the overall growth rate slowed from the third quarter as the
contribution from the COVID-related contract in Germany eased. For
the full year, like-for-like revenue less pass-through costs for
the segment was up 21.8%, and up 7.8% over two years.
Operating profitability
Reported
profit before tax was £951 million, compared to a loss of
£2.8 billion in 2020, reflecting principally the £3.1
billion of impairment charges and investment write-downs and
£313 million of restructuring and transformation costs during
the prior period.
Reported
profit after tax was £721 million compared to a loss in 2020
of £2.9 billion.
Headline
EBITDA (including IFRS 16 depreciation) for 2021 was up 18.2% to
£1.8 billion, compared to £1.5 billion the previous year.
Headline operating profit was up 18.5% to £1.5 billion. The
significant growth in profitability year-on-year reflects the
strong recovery from the impact of COVID-19 on revenue less
pass-through costs, as well as improvement in our competitive
performance and the progress on our transformation programme, with
£245 million of gross savings towards our 2025 annual run rate
target of £600 million.
Headline
operating margin was up 150 basis points to 14.4%, and up 170 basis
points like-for-like. Operating costs were up 4.7%, but were flat
year-on-year excluding the impact of incentives. Staff costs
pre-incentives rose 3.2% but property costs fell 17.1% reflecting
the campus roll-out and the continued impact of COVID. IT costs
were flat, and other costs were down 13.2%, driven by lower office
costs and bad debt.
The
Group’s headline operating margin is after charging £42
million of severance costs, compared with £68 million in 2020
and £592 million of incentive payments, compared to £185
million in 2020 and £294 million in 2019.
The
average number of people in the Group in 2021 was 104,808 compared
to 102,822 in 2020. The total number of people at 31 December 2021
was 109,382 compared to 99,830 at 31 December 2020.
Exceptional items
The
Group incurred a net exceptional loss of £270 million in 2021.
This comprises the Group’s share of associate company
exceptional losses (£62 million), restructuring and
transformation costs (£176 million) and other net exceptional
losses (£32 million). Restructuring and transformation costs
mainly comprise severance and property-related costs arising from
the continuing structural review of parts of the Group’s
operations, investments in IT and ERP systems as part of our
transformation programme, and our response to the COVID-19
situation. This compares with a net exceptional loss in 2020 of
£477 million.
Interest and taxes
Net
finance costs (excluding the revaluation and retranslation of
financial instruments) were £215 million, a decrease of
£15 million year-on-year, primarily as a result of the
repayment of the $500 million 3.625% September 2022 bond in July
2021 and foreign exchange movements.
The
reported tax charge was £230 million (2020: £127
million). The headline tax rate (measured on headline profit before
tax, including associate income) was 24.0% (2020: 23.0%). Given the
Group’s geographic mix of profits and the changing
international tax environment, the tax rate is expected to be
around 25.5% in 2022, and to continue to increase in subsequent
years.
Earnings and dividend
Headline
profit before tax was up 31.1% to £1.4 billion, and profits attributable to share
owners were £954 million.
Reported
diluted earnings per share were 52.5 pence, compared to a loss per
share of 243.0 pence in the prior period. Headline diluted earnings
per share were up 30.6% to 78.5 pence.
The
Board is proposing a final dividend for 2021 of 18.7 pence per
share, which together with the interim dividend paid in November
2021 gives a full-year dividend of 31.2 pence per share. The record
date for the final dividend is 10 June
2022, and the dividend will be payable on 8 July 2022.
Further
details of WPP’s financial performance are provided in
Appendix 1.
Cash flow highlights
Twelve months ended (£ million)
|
31 December 2021
|
31 December 2020
|
Operating profit/(loss) of continuing and discontinued
operations
|
1,229
|
(2,267)
|
Depreciation and amortisation
|
542
|
631
|
Investment and other impairment (reversals)/charges
|
(1)
|
3,316
|
Lease payments (inc interest)
|
(409)
|
(399)
|
Non-cash compensation
|
100
|
74
|
Net interest paid
|
(126)
|
(100)
|
Tax paid
|
(391)
|
(372)
|
Capex
|
(293)
|
(273)
|
Earnout payments
|
(57)
|
(115)
|
Other
|
(31)
|
(50)
|
Trade working capital
|
319
|
780
|
Other receivables, payables and provisions
|
383
|
58
|
Free cash flow
|
1,265
|
1,283
|
Disposal proceeds
|
77
|
284
|
Net initial acquisition payments
|
(464)
|
(144)
|
Dividends
|
(315)
|
(122)
|
Share repurchases and buybacks
|
(819)
|
(290)
|
Net cash flow
|
(256)
|
1,011
|
In 2021, net cash outflow was £256 million, compared to a
£1.0 billion inflow in 2020. The main drivers of the cash flow
performance year-on-year were the higher operating profit and
continued improvements in working capital, offset by increased
spend on acquisitions, growth in the dividend and the significant
increase in the share buyback. A summary of the Group’s
unaudited cash flow statement and notes for the twelve months to 31
December 2021 is provided in Appendix 1.
Balance sheet highlights
As at
31 December 2021 we had cash and cash equivalents of £3.5
billion and total liquidity, including undrawn credit facilities,
of £5.5 billion. Average adjusted net debt in 2021 was
£1.6 billion, compared to £2.3 billion in the prior
period, at 2020 exchange rates. On 31 December 2021 adjusted net
debt was £0.9 billion, against £0.7 billion on 31
December 2020, an increase of £0.2 billion at 2021 exchange
rates. The slightly higher adjusted net debt figure reflects mainly
the significant increase in share buybacks
year-on-year.
During
the year, we converted the majority of our cash pool arrangements
to zero-balancing cash pools, whereby the cash and overdrafts
within these cash pools are physically swept to the header accounts
on a daily basis, resulting in a reduction of the large gross cash
and overdraft positions at 31 December 2020. Our bond portfolio at
31 December 2021 had an average maturity of 7.0 years. In July 2021
we repaid the $500 million 3.625% September 2022 bond. A €250
million Eurobond at 3-month EURIBOR +0.45% is due to mature in
March 2022.
The
average adjusted net debt to EBITDA ratio in the 12 months to 31
December 2021 is 0.90x, which excludes the impact of IFRS 16. This
is below our target range of 1.5 – 1.75x average adjusted net
debt to EBITDA.
A
summary of the Group’s unaudited balance sheet and notes as
at 31 December 2021 is provided in Appendix 1.
Appendix 1: Preliminary results for the year ended 31 December
2021
Unaudited preliminary consolidated income statement for the year
ended 31 December 2021
£
million
|
Notes
|
2021
|
20201
|
Continuing operations
|
|
|
|
Revenue
|
7
|
12,801.1
|
12,002.8
|
Costs
of services
|
4
|
(10,597.5)
|
(9,987.9)
|
Gross profit
|
|
2,203.6
|
2,014.9
|
General
and administrative costs
|
4
|
(974.6)
|
(4,293.0)
|
Operating profit/(loss)
|
|
1,229.0
|
(2,278.1)
|
Share
of results of associates
|
5
|
23.8
|
(136.0)
|
Profit/(loss) before interest and taxation
|
|
1,252.8
|
(2,414.1)
|
Finance
and investment income
|
6
|
69.4
|
82.7
|
Finance
costs
|
6
|
(283.6)
|
(312.0)
|
Revaluation
and retranslation of financial instruments
|
6
|
(87.8)
|
(147.2)
|
Profit/(loss) before taxation
|
|
950.8
|
(2,790.6)
|
Taxation
|
8
|
(230.1)
|
(127.1)
|
Profit/(loss) for the year from continuing operations
|
720.7
|
(2,917.7)
|
|
|
|
Discontinued operations
|
|
|
|
Profit for the year from discontinued operations
|
|
-
|
16.4
|
|
|
|
|
Profit/(loss) for the year
|
|
720.7
|
(2,901.3)
|
|
|
|
|
Attributable to:
|
|
|
|
Equity
holders of the parent
|
|
|
|
Continuing
operations
|
|
637.7
|
(2,971.6)
|
Discontinued
operations
|
|
-
|
6.5
|
|
|
637.7
|
(2,965.1)
|
Non-controlling
interests
|
|
|
|
Continuing
operations
|
|
83.0
|
53.9
|
Discontinued
operations
|
|
-
|
9.9
|
|
|
83.0
|
63.8
|
|
|
720.7
|
(2,901.3)
|
|
|
|
|
Earnings per share from continuing and discontinued
operations
|
|
|
Basic
earnings per ordinary share
|
10
|
53.4p
|
(242.5p)
|
Diluted
earnings per ordinary share
|
10
|
52.5p
|
(242.5p)
|
|
|
|
|
Earnings per share from continuing operations
|
|
|
|
Basic
earnings per ordinary share
|
10
|
53.4p
|
(243.0p)
|
Diluted
earnings per ordinary share
|
10
|
52.5p
|
(243.0p)
|
|
|
|
|
1 Figures have been restated as described in the accounting
policies.
Unaudited preliminary consolidated statement of comprehensive
income for the year ended 31 December 2021
£
million
|
|
2021
|
20201
|
Profit/(loss) for the year
|
|
720.7
|
(2,901.3)
|
Items that may be reclassified subsequently to profit or
loss:
|
|
|
|
Exchange
adjustments on foreign currency net investments
|
|
(97.5)
|
85.1
|
Share of other comprehensive income/(loss) of associates
undertakings
|
|
13.5
|
(61.5)
|
Exchange
adjustments recycled to the income statement on disposal of
discontinued operations
|
|
-
|
(20.6)
|
|
|
(84.0)
|
3.0
|
Items that will not be reclassified subsequently to profit or
loss:
|
|
|
|
Actuarial
gain on defined benefit pension plans
|
|
14.3
|
2.0
|
Deferred
tax on defined benefit pension plans
|
|
(3.0)
|
7.4
|
Movements on equity
investments held at fair value through other comprehensive
income
|
|
(35.5)
|
(127.7)
|
|
|
(24.2)
|
(118.3)
|
Other comprehensive loss relating to the year
|
|
(108.2)
|
(115.3)
|
Total comprehensive income/(loss) relating to the year
|
|
612.5
|
(3,016.6)
|
|
|
|
|
Attributable to:
|
|
|
|
Equity
holders of the parent
|
|
|
|
Continuing
operations
|
|
539.8
|
(3,063.9)
|
Discontinued
operations
|
|
-
|
(12.6)
|
|
|
539.8
|
(3,076.5)
|
Non-controlling
interests
|
|
|
|
Continuing
operations
|
|
72.7
|
50.5
|
Discontinued
operations
|
|
-
|
9.4
|
|
|
72.7
|
59.9
|
|
|
612.5
|
(3,016.6)
|
1 Figures have been restated as described in the accounting
policies.
Unaudited preliminary consolidated cash flow statement for the year
ended
31 December 2021
£
million
|
Notes
|
2021
|
2020
|
Net cash inflow from operating activities
|
11
|
2,032.8
|
2,054.8
|
Investing activities
|
|
|
|
Acquisitions
|
11
|
(386.1)
|
(178.4)
|
Disposals
of investments and subsidiaries
|
11
|
28.3
|
272.3
|
Purchase
of property, plant and equipment
|
|
(263.2)
|
(218.3)
|
Purchase
of other intangible assets (including capitalised computer
software)
|
|
(29.9)
|
(54.4)
|
Proceeds
on disposal of property, plant and equipment
|
|
8.7
|
11.2
|
Net cash outflow from investing activities
|
|
(642.2)
|
(167.6)
|
Financing activities
|
|
|
|
Repayment
of lease liabilities
|
|
(320.7)
|
(300.1)
|
Share
option proceeds
|
|
4.4
|
-
|
Cash
consideration received from non-controlling interests
|
11
|
39.5
|
-
|
Cash
consideration for purchase of non-controlling
interests
|
11
|
(135.0)
|
(80.6)
|
Share
repurchases and buy-backs
|
11
|
(818.5)
|
(290.2)
|
Proceeds
from borrowings
|
11
|
-
|
915.5
|
Repayment of borrowings
|
11
|
(397.1)
|
(282.7)
|
Financing
and share issue costs
|
|
(0.4)
|
(7.1)
|
Equity
dividends paid
|
|
(314.7)
|
(122.0)
|
Dividends
paid to non-controlling interests in subsidiary
undertakings
|
|
(114.5)
|
(83.3)
|
Net cash outflow from financing activities
|
|
(2,057.0)
|
(250.5)
|
Net (decrease)/increase in cash and cash equivalents
|
|
(666.4)
|
1,636.7
|
Translation
of cash and cash equivalents
|
|
(130.1)
|
(99.2)
|
Cash
and cash equivalents at beginning of year
|
|
4,337.1
|
2,799.6
|
Cash and cash equivalents at end of year
|
12
|
3,540.6
|
4,337.1
|
|
|
|
|
Reconciliation of net cash flow to movement in adjusted net
debt:
|
|
|
|
Net (decrease)/increase in cash and cash equivalents
|
|
(666.4)
|
1,636.7
|
Cash
outflow/(inflow) from decrease/(increase) in debt
financing
|
|
397.5
|
(625.7)
|
Other
movements
|
|
(5.6)
|
(6.1)
|
Translation
differences
|
|
69.0
|
(227.2)
|
Movement of adjusted net debt in the year
|
|
(205.5)
|
777.7
|
Adjusted
net debt at beginning of year
|
|
(695.6)
|
(1,473.3)
|
Adjusted net debt at end of year
|
12
|
(901.1)
|
(695.6)
|
Unaudited preliminary consolidated balance sheet as at 31 December
2021
£
million
|
Notes
|
2021
|
20201
|
20191
|
Non-current assets
|
|
|
|
|
Intangible
assets:
|
|
|
|
|
Goodwill
|
13
|
7,612.3
|
7,388.8
|
10,110.6
|
Other
|
14
|
1,359.5
|
1,389.3
|
1,468.8
|
Property,
plant and equipment
|
|
896.4
|
790.9
|
876.0
|
Right-of-use
assets
|
|
1,395.1
|
1,504.5
|
1,734.5
|
Interests
in associates and joint ventures
|
|
412.9
|
330.7
|
813.0
|
Other
investments
|
|
318.3
|
387.3
|
498.3
|
Deferred
tax assets
|
|
341.5
|
212.9
|
187.9
|
Corporate
income tax recoverable
|
|
46.6
|
24.8
|
-
|
Trade
and other receivables
|
15
|
152.6
|
156.2
|
137.6
|
|
|
12,535.2
|
12,185.4
|
15,826.7
|
Current assets
|
|
|
|
|
Corporate
income tax recoverable
|
|
90.4
|
110.3
|
142.6
|
Trade
and other receivables
|
15
|
11,362.3
|
10,972.3
|
11,822.3
|
Cash
and short-term deposits
|
|
3,882.9
|
12,899.1
|
11,305.7
|
|
|
15,335.6
|
23,981.7
|
23,270.6
|
Assets classified as held for sale
|
|
-
|
-
|
485.3
|
|
|
15,335.6
|
23,981.7
|
23,755.9
|
|
|
|
|
|
Current liabilities
|
|
|
|
|
Trade
and other payables
|
16
|
(15,252.3)
|
(13,859.7)
|
(14,188.1)
|
Corporate
income tax payable
|
|
(386.2)
|
(424.4)
|
(595.6)
|
Short-term
lease liabilities
|
|
(279.7)
|
(323.8)
|
(302.2)
|
Bank
overdrafts, bonds and bank loans
|
|
(567.2)
|
(8,619.2)
|
(8,798.0)
|
|
|
(16,485.4)
|
(23,227.1)
|
(23,883.9)
|
Liabilities associated with assets classified as held for
sale
|
|
-
|
-
|
(170.4)
|
|
|
(16,485.4)
|
(23,227.1)
|
(24,054.3)
|
Net current (liabilities)/assets
|
|
(1,149.8)
|
754.6
|
(298.4)
|
Total assets less current liabilities
|
|
11,385.4
|
12,940.0
|
15,528.3
|
|
|
|
|
|
Non-current liabilities
|
|
|
|
|
Bonds
and bank loans
|
|
(4,216.8)
|
(4,975.5)
|
(4,047.3)
|
Trade
and other payables
|
17
|
(619.9)
|
(313.5)
|
(449.6)
|
Corporate
income tax payable
|
|
-
|
(1.3)
|
-
|
Deferred
tax liabilities
|
|
(312.5)
|
(304.1)
|
(379.8)
|
Provisions
for post-employment benefits
|
|
(136.6)
|
(156.7)
|
(159.0)
|
Provisions
for liabilities and charges
|
|
(268.5)
|
(306.3)
|
(247.8)
|
Long-term
lease liabilities
|
|
(1,762.1)
|
(1,832.5)
|
(1,947.5)
|
|
|
(7,316.4)
|
(7,889.9)
|
(7,231.0)
|
Net assets
|
|
4,069.0
|
5,050.1
|
8,297.3
|
|
|
|
|
|
Equity
|
|
|
|
|
Called-up
share capital
|
18
|
122.4
|
129.6
|
132.8
|
Share
premium account
|
|
574.7
|
570.3
|
570.3
|
Other
reserves
|
|
(335.9)
|
191.2
|
(174.7)
|
Own
shares
|
|
(1,112.1)
|
(1,118.3)
|
(1,178.7)
|
Retained
earnings
|
|
4,367.3
|
4,959.2
|
8,576.2
|
Equity shareholders’ funds
|
|
3,616.4
|
4,732.0
|
7,925.9
|
Non-controlling
interests
|
|
452.6
|
318.1
|
371.4
|
Total equity
|
|
4,069.0
|
5,050.1
|
8,297.3
|
|
|
|
|
|
1 Figures have been restated as described in the accounting
policies.
Unaudited preliminary consolidated statement of changes in equity
for the year ended 31 December 2021
£
million
|
Called-up
share capital
|
Share
premium account
|
Other reserves1
|
Own shares
|
Retained earnings1
|
Total equity
share
holders’ funds1
|
Non-
controlling interests
|
Total1
|
Balance at 1 January 2020
|
132.8
|
570.3
|
(169.9)
|
(1,178.7)
|
8,689.9
|
8,044.4
|
371.4
|
8,415.8
|
Restatement1
|
-
|
-
|
(4.8)
|
-
|
(113.7)
|
(118.5)
|
-
|
(118.5)
|
Restated balance at 1 January 2020
|
132.8
|
570.3
|
(174.7)
|
(1,178.7)
|
8,576.2
|
7,925.9
|
371.4
|
8,297.3
|
Share
cancellations
|
(3.2)
|
-
|
3.2
|
-
|
(281.2)
|
(281.2)
|
-
|
(281.2)
|
Treasury
share allocations
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
0.6
|
(0.6)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(Loss)/profit
for the year
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(2,965.1)
|
(2,965.1)
|
63.8
|
(2,901.3)
|
Exchange
adjustments on foreign currency net investments
|
-
|
-
|
89.0
|
-
|
-
|
89.0
|
(3.9)
|
85.1
|
Share of other comprehensive loss of associates
undertakings
|
-
|
-
|
(61.5)
|
-
|
-
|
(61.5)
|
-
|
(61.5)
|
Exchange
adjustments recycled to the income statement on disposal of
discontinued operations
|
-
|
-
|
(20.6)
|
-
|
-
|
(20.6)
|
-
|
(20.6)
|
Movements
on equity investments held at fair value through other
comprehensive income
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(127.7)
|
(127.7)
|
-
|
(127.7)
|
Actuarial
gain on defined benefit pension plans
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
2.0
|
2.0
|
-
|
2.0
|
Deferred
tax on defined benefit pension plans
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
7.4
|
7.4
|
-
|
7.4
|
Other
comprehensive income/(loss)
|
-
|
-
|
6.9
|
-
|
(118.3)
|
(111.4)
|
(3.9)
|
(115.3)
|
Total
comprehensive income/(loss)
|
-
|
-
|
6.9
|
-
|
(3,083.4)
|
(3,076.5)
|
59.9
|
(3,016.6)
|
Dividends
paid
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(122.0)
|
(122.0)
|
(83.3)
|
(205.3)
|
Non-cash
share-based incentive plans (including share options)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
74.4
|
74.4
|
-
|
74.4
|
Net
movement in own shares held by ESOP Trusts
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
59.8
|
(64.9)
|
(5.1)
|
-
|
(5.1)
|
Recognition/derecognition
of liabilities in respect of put options
|
-
|
-
|
103.5
|
-
|
(26.6)
|
76.9
|
-
|
76.9
|
Share
purchases – close period commitments2
|
-
|
-
|
252.3
|
-
|
-
|
252.3
|
-
|
252.3
|
Acquisition
of subsidiaries3
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(112.7)
|
(112.7)
|
(29.9)
|
(142.6)
|
Restated balance at 31 December 2020
|
129.6
|
570.3
|
191.2
|
(1,118.3)
|
4,959.2
|
4,732.0
|
318.1
|
5,050.1
|
Ordinary shares issued
|
-
|
4.4
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
4.4
|
-
|
4.4
|
Share
cancellations
|
(7.2)
|
-
|
7.2
|
-
|
(729.3)
|
(729.3)
|
-
|
(729.3)
|
Treasury
share allocations
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
3.7
|
(3.7)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Profit
for the year
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
637.7
|
637.7
|
83.0
|
720.7
|
Exchange
adjustments on foreign currency net investments
|
-
|
-
|
(87.2)
|
-
|
-
|
(87.2)
|
(10.3)
|
(97.5)
|
Share of other comprehensive income of associates
undertakings
|
-
|
-
|
7.3
|
-
|
6.2
|
13.5
|
-
|
13.5
|
Movements
on equity investments held at fair value through other
comprehensive income
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(35.5)
|
(35.5)
|
-
|
(35.5)
|
Actuarial
gain on defined benefit pension plans
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
14.3
|
14.3
|
-
|
14.3
|
Deferred
tax on defined benefit pension plans
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(3.0)
|
(3.0)
|
-
|
(3.0)
|
Other
comprehensive loss
|
-
|
-
|
(79.9)
|
-
|
(18.0)
|
(97.9)
|
(10.3)
|
(108.2)
|
Total
comprehensive (loss)/income
|
-
|
-
|
(79.9)
|
-
|
619.7
|
539.8
|
72.7
|
612.5
|
Dividends
paid
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(314.7)
|
(314.7)
|
(114.5)
|
(429.2)
|
Non-cash
share-based incentive plans (including share options)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
99.6
|
99.6
|
-
|
99.6
|
Tax adjustment on share-based payments
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
15.4
|
15.4
|
-
|
15.4
|
Net
movement in own shares held by ESOP Trusts
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
2.5
|
(91.7)
|
(89.2)
|
-
|
(89.2)
|
Recognition/derecognition
of liabilities in respect of put options4
|
-
|
-
|
(242.7)
|
-
|
1.1
|
(241.6)
|
-
|
(241.6)
|
Share
purchases – close period commitments5
|
-
|
-
|
(211.7)
|
-
|
-
|
(211.7)
|
-
|
(211.7)
|
Share of other equity movements of associates
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(8.0)
|
(8.0)
|
-
|
(8.0)
|
Acquisition
of subsidiaries3
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(180.3)
|
(180.3)
|
176.3
|
(4.0)
|
Balance at 31 December 2021
|
122.4
|
574.7
|
(335.9)
|
(1,112.1)
|
4,367.3
|
3,616.4
|
452.6
|
4,069.0
|
1 Other reserves and retained earnings have been restated
for the impact of a tax restatement, as described in the accounting
policies.
2 During 2019, the
Company entered into an arrangement with a third party to conduct
share buybacks on its behalf in the close period commencing on 2
January 2020 and ending on 27 February 2020, in accordance with UK
listing rules. The commitment resulting from this agreement
constituted a liability at 31 December 2019 and was recognised as a
movement in other reserves in the year ended 31 December 2019. As
the close period ended on 27 February 2020 the movement in other
reserves has been reversed in the year ended 31 December
2020.
3 Acquisition of
subsidiaries represents movements in retained earnings and
non-controlling interests arising from changes in ownership of
existing subsidiaries and recognition of non-controlling interests
on new acquisitions.
4 During the year, the
Group merged Finsbury Glover Hering and Sard Verbinnen & Co to
form a leading global communications firm. As a part of this
transaction, certain management acquired shares in the company and
a put option was granted which allows the equity partners to
require the Group to purchase these shares. This resulted in a
movement in other reserves in the year of £219.6
million.
5 During 2021, the
Company entered into an arrangement with a third party to conduct
share buybacks on its behalf in the close period commencing on 16
December 2021 and ending on 18 February 2022, in accordance with UK
listing rules. The commitment resulting from this agreement
constituted a liability at 31 December 2021 and was recognised
as a movement in other reserves in the year ended 31 December
2021.
Notes to the unaudited preliminary consolidated financial
statements
The
unaudited preliminary consolidated financial statements are
prepared under the historical cost convention, except for the
revaluation of certain financial instruments and held for sale
assets as disclosed in our accounting policies.
The
unaudited preliminary consolidated financial statements comply with
the recognition and measurement criteria of International Financial
Reporting Standards (IFRS) as adopted by the European Union and
issued by the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) and
with the accounting policies of the Group which were set out on
pages 158 - 164 of the 2020 Annual Report and Accounts. With the
exception of the impact of Interest Rate Benchmark Reform –
Phase 2 (Amendments to IFRS 9, IAS 39, IFRS 7, IFRS 4 and IFRS 16),
COVID-19-Related Rent Concessions beyond 30 June 2021 (Amendment to
IFRS 16) and the treatment for configuration and customisation
costs in a cloud computing arrangement, which are discussed below,
no changes have been made to the Group’s accounting policies
in the year ended 31 December 2021.
Whilst
the financial information included in this preliminary announcement
has been computed in accordance with IFRS, this announcement does
not itself contain sufficient information to comply with all IFRS
disclosure requirements. The Company’s 2021 Annual Report and
Accounts will be prepared in compliance with IFRS. The unaudited
preliminary announcement does not constitute a dissemination of the
annual financial report and does not therefore need to meet the
dissemination requirements for annual financial reports. A separate
dissemination announcement in accordance with Disclosure and
Transparency Rules (DTR) 6.3 will be made when the annual report
and audited financial statements are available on the
Company’s website.
Impact of Interest Rate Benchmark Reform
The
amendments issued by the IASB, Interest Rate Benchmark Reform
– Phase 2 (Amendments to IFRS 9, IAS 39, IFRS 7, IFRS 4 and
IFRS 16), are mandatory and were effective from 1 January 2021.
They provide relief on certain existing requirements in IFRS
Standards, relating to modifications of financial instruments and
lease contracts or hedging relationships triggered by a replacement
of a benchmark interest rate in a contract with a new alternative
benchmark rate, as a result of Interest Rate Benchmark Reform. The
Group does not consider that these amendments had a significant
impact on the financial statements as they provide relief for the
possible effects of the uncertainty arising from interest rate
benchmark reform.
Impact of COVID-19-Related Rent Concessions beyond 30 June
2021
The
amendment issued by the IASB, COVID-19-Related Rent Concessions
beyond 30 June 2021 (Amendment to IFRS 16), was effective from 1
April 2021. It provides an extension to the period under which
practical relief to lessees could be applied in accounting for rent
concessions occurring as a direct consequence of COVID-19, as
introduced in the original amendment, COVID-19-Related Concessions
(Amendment to IFRS 16). There has been no material impact to our
financial statements as a result of the application of this
amendment.
Impact of IFRIC Agenda Decision on Accounting Treatment for
Configuration and Customisation Costs in a Cloud Computing
Arrangement
In
April 2021, an IFRIC agenda decision was issued in relation to the
accounting treatment for configuration and customisation costs in a
cloud computing arrangement. This guidance clarified that in order
for an intangible asset to be capitalised in relation to
customisation and configuration costs in a software-as-a-service
(SaaS) arrangement, it is necessary for there to be control of the
underlying software asset or for there to be a separate intangible
asset which meets the definition in IAS 38 Intangible
Assets.
In
2020, as part of our Group transformation plan, the Group commenced
a multi-year implementation of a cloud-based ERP and human capital
management tool. The Group has completed its assessment of the
financial reporting impact of this agenda decision on this
implementation and has changed our accounting policy in the
financial statements to align with the clarified guidance within
the IFRIC agenda decision. As a result, the Group has expensed all
costs associated with this implementation, which amount to
£62.2 million as at 31 December 2021. This balance includes
costs that were previously capitalised as at 31 December 2020 of
£14.0 million.
Notes to the unaudited preliminary consolidated financial
statements (continued)
2.
Accounting
policies (continued)
Restatement
During
2021, the Group determined that the financial statements for the
prior periods contained errors relating to historic tax asset and
liability adjustments that had accumulated over a number of years
in the Group consolidation. As a result, previously reported
corporate income tax recoverable, corporate income tax payable and
tax charge were incorrect. The cumulative impact resulted in an
overstatement of equity as at 31 December 2019 of £118.5
million, which has been corrected by reducing opening retained
earnings by £113.7 million and other reserves by £4.8
million. Corporate income tax recoverable has reduced by £22.8
million and corporate income tax payable increased by £93.5
million on the consolidated balance sheet at 31 December 2020.
These changes also decreased the tax charge in the year ended 31
December 2020 by £2.2 million. The restatement resulted in an
increase in the basic and diluted earnings per share from
continuing and discontinued operations of 0.2p and 0.2p,
respectively, for the year ended 31 December 2020.
Statutory information
The
financial information included in this preliminary announcement
does not constitute statutory accounts. The statutory accounts for
the year ended 31 December 2020 have been delivered to the
Jersey Registrar and received an unqualified auditors’
report. The statutory accounts for the year ended 31 December
2021 will be finalised on the basis of the financial information
presented by the directors in this unaudited preliminary
announcement and will be delivered to the Jersey Registrar
following the Company’s General Meeting. The audit report for
the year ended 31 December 2021 has yet to be signed. The
announcement of the preliminary results was approved on behalf of
the board of directors on 24 February
2022.
Notes to the unaudited preliminary consolidated financial
statements (continued)
The
presentation currency of the Group is pound sterling and the
unaudited preliminary consolidated financial statements have been
prepared on this basis.
The
2021 unaudited preliminary consolidated income statement is
prepared using, among other currencies, average exchange rates of
US$1.3757 to the pound (2020: US$1.2836) and €1.1633 to the
pound (2020:
€1.1248).
The unaudited preliminary consolidated balance sheet as at
31 December 2021 has been prepared using the exchange rates on
that day of US$1.3532 to the pound (2020: US$1.3670) and
€1.1893 to the pound (2020: €1.1166).
4.
Costs
of services and general and administrative costs
£
million
|
2021
|
2020
|
Continuing operations
|
|
|
Costs
of services
|
10,597.5
|
9,987.9
|
General
and administrative costs
|
974.6
|
4,293.0
|
|
11,572.1
|
14,280.9
|
Costs
of services and general and administrative costs
include:
£
million
|
2021
|
2020
|
Continuing operations
|
|
|
Staff
costs
|
7,166.7
|
6,556.5
|
Establishment
costs
|
529.0
|
638.5
|
Media
pass-through costs
|
1,865.3
|
1,555.2
|
Other
costs of services and general and administrative costs1
|
2,011.1
|
5,530.7
|
|
11,572.1
|
14,280.9
|
Staff
costs include:
£
million
|
2021
|
2020
|
Continuing operations
|
|
|
Wages
and salaries
|
4,797.2
|
4,781.0
|
Cash-based
incentive plans
|
455.2
|
110.7
|
Share-based
incentive plans
|
99.6
|
74.4
|
Social
security costs
|
630.1
|
570.9
|
Pension
costs
|
177.7
|
171.7
|
Severance
|
41.8
|
68.2
|
Other
staff costs
|
965.1
|
779.6
|
|
7,166.7
|
6,556.5
|
1 Other costs of services and general and administrative
costs include £538.6 million (2020: £685.6 million) of
other pass-through costs.
Notes to the unaudited preliminary consolidated financial
statements (continued)
4.
Costs
of services and general and administrative costs
(continued)
Other
costs of services and general and administrative costs
include:
£
million
|
2021
|
2020
|
Continuing operations
|
|
|
Amortisation
and impairment of acquired intangible assets
|
97.8
|
89.1
|
Goodwill
impairment
|
1.8
|
2,822.9
|
Losses/(gains)
on disposal of investments and subsidiaries
|
10.6
|
(7.8)
|
Gains
on remeasurement of equity interests arising from a change in scope
of ownership
|
-
|
(0.6)
|
Investment
and other impairment (reversals)/charges
|
(42.4)
|
296.2
|
Restructuring
and transformation costs
|
145.5
|
80.7
|
Restructuring
costs in relation to COVID-19
|
29.9
|
232.5
|
Litigation
settlement
|
21.3
|
25.6
|
Depreciation
of property, plant and equipment
|
151.2
|
174.8
|
Depreciation
of right-of-use assets
|
272.9
|
331.9
|
Amortisation
of other intangible assets
|
19.9
|
35.2
|
Short-term
lease expense
|
18.0
|
36.7
|
Low-value
lease expense
|
2.3
|
2.3
|
Amortisation
and impairment of acquired intangible assets of £97.8 million
(2020: £89.1 million) includes an impairment charge in the
year of £47.9 million (2020: £21.6 million) in regard to
certain brand names that are no longer in use, including £43.8
million for brands with an indefinite life.
Losses
on disposal of investments and subsidiaries of £10.6 million
in 2021 includes a loss of £4.9 million on the disposal of
XMKT in China, which completed in September 2021.
Investment
and other impairment reversals of £42.4 million primarily
relates to the partial reversal of a £255.6 million impairment
taken in 2020 relating to Imagina, an associate in
Spain.
Restructuring
and transformation costs of £145.5 million (2020: £80.7
million) include £94.2 million in relation to the
Group’s IT transformation programme. This programme will
allow technology to become a competitive advantage in the market as
our clients, and their clients, move to an ever-increasing digital
world. It includes costs of £62.2 million (including
£14.0 million that was previously capitalised at 31 December
2020) in relation to the rollout of a new ERP system in order to
drive efficiency and collaboration throughout the Group. The
remaining £51.3 million relates to the continuing
restructuring plan, first outlined on the Investor Day in December
2018. As part of that plan, restructuring actions have been taken
to right-size under-performing businesses, address high-cost
severance markets and simplify operational structures.
Restructuring
costs in relation to COVID-19 of £29.9 million (2020:
£232.5 million) primarily relate to property costs which the
Group undertook in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. As management
continues to assess the impact of COVID-19 on long-term working
practices and the Group’s real estate portfolio, further
impairments may occur in the future.
The
goodwill impairment charge of £2,822.9 million in 2020
reflects the adverse impacts of COVID-19 on a number of businesses
in the Group at that time.
Notes to the unaudited preliminary consolidated financial
statements (continued)
5.
Share
of results of associates
Share
of results of associates include:
£
million
|
2021
|
2020
|
Continuing operations
|
|
|
Share
of profit before interest and taxation
|
208.5
|
142.5
|
Share
of exceptional losses
|
(62.3)
|
(146.1)
|
Share
of interest and non-controlling interests
|
(83.9)
|
(91.4)
|
Share
of taxation
|
(38.5)
|
(41.0)
|
|
23.8
|
(136.0)
|
Share
of exceptional losses of £62.3 million (2020: £146.1
million) primarily comprise £38.8 million (2020: £54.3
million) of amortisation and impairment of acquired intangible
assets as well as restructuring and one-off transaction costs of
£18.8 million (2020: £89.3 million) within
Kantar.
6.
Finance
and investment income, finance costs and revaluation and
retranslation of financial instruments
Finance
and investment income includes:
£
million
|
2021
|
2020
|
Continuing operations
|
|
|
Income
from equity investments
|
17.9
|
8.7
|
Interest
income
|
51.5
|
74.0
|
|
69.4
|
82.7
|
Finance
costs include:
£
million
|
2021
|
2020
|
Continuing operations
|
|
|
Net
interest expense on pension plans
|
1.8
|
2.9
|
Interest
on other long-term employee benefits
|
2.4
|
3.1
|
Interest
payable and similar charges
|
188.5
|
205.0
|
Interest
expense related to lease liabilities
|
90.9
|
101.0
|
|
283.6
|
312.0
|
Revaluation
and retranslation of financial instruments include:
£
million
|
2021
|
2020
|
Continuing operations
|
|
|
Movements
in fair value of treasury instruments
|
9.1
|
15.4
|
Premium
on the early repayment of bonds
|
(13.0)
|
-
|
Revaluation
of investments held at fair value through profit or
loss
|
(7.5)
|
8.0
|
Revaluation
of put options over non-controlling interests
|
(40.6)
|
12.3
|
Revaluation
of payments due to vendors (earnout agreements)
|
(58.7)
|
13.4
|
Retranslation
of financial instruments
|
22.9
|
(196.3)
|
|
(87.8)
|
(147.2)
|
Notes to the unaudited preliminary consolidated financial
statements (continued)
7. Segmental
analysis
Reported
contributions by operating sector were as follows:
£
million
|
2021
|
20201
|
Continuing operations
|
|
|
Revenue
|
|
|
Global
Integrated Agencies
|
10,836.3
|
10,265.5
|
Public
Relations
|
959.0
|
892.9
|
Specialist
Agencies
|
1,005.8
|
844.4
|
|
12,801.1
|
12,002.8
|
Revenue less pass-through costs2
|
|
|
Global
Integrated Agencies
|
8,638.7
|
8,194.2
|
Public
Relations
|
909.7
|
854.4
|
Specialist
Agencies
|
848.8
|
713.4
|
|
10,397.2
|
9,762.0
|
Headline operating profit3
|
|
|
Global
Integrated Agencies
|
1,215.5
|
1,059.9
|
Public
Relations
|
143.1
|
141.3
|
Specialist
Agencies
|
134.9
|
59.3
|
|
1,493.5
|
1,260.5
|
Reported
contributions by geographical area were as follows:
£
million
|
2021
|
2020
|
Continuing operations
|
|
|
Revenue
|
|
|
North
America4
|
4,494.2
|
4,464.9
|
United
Kingdom
|
1,866.9
|
1,637.0
|
Western
Continental Europe
|
2,786.3
|
2,441.6
|
Asia
Pacific, Latin America, Africa & Middle East and Central &
Eastern Europe
|
3,653.7
|
3,459.3
|
|
12,801.1
|
12,002.8
|
Revenue less pass-through costs2
|
|
|
North
America4
|
3,849.2
|
3,743.4
|
United
Kingdom
|
1,414.3
|
1,233.8
|
Western
Continental Europe
|
2,225.4
|
2,019.4
|
Asia
Pacific, Latin America, Africa & Middle East and Central &
Eastern Europe
|
2,908.3
|
2,765.4
|
|
10,397.2
|
9,762.0
|
Headline operating profit3
|
|
|
North
America4
|
655.7
|
611.9
|
United
Kingdom
|
180.9
|
137.7
|
Western
Continental Europe
|
288.6
|
198.7
|
Asia
Pacific, Latin America, Africa & Middle East and Central &
Eastern Europe
|
368.3
|
312.2
|
|
1,493.5
|
1,260.5
|
1 During 2020, the
Group announced the intention to combine Grey and AKQA into AKQA
Group, and to bring Geometry and GTB into VMLY&R, and
International Healthcare into VMLY&R and Ogilvy. As a result
AKQA, Geometry, GTB and International Healthcare are now reported
within Global Integrated Agencies, having previously been reported
within Specialist Agencies. Prior year figures have been
re-presented to reflect these changes.
2 Revenue less pass-through costs is defined in Appendix
2.
3 Headline operating profit is defined in Appendix
2.
4 North America
includes the US with revenue of £4,220.8 million (2020:
£4,216.1 million), revenue less pass-through costs of
£3,597.4 million (2020: £3,524.8 million) and headline
operating profit of £615.2 million (2020: £563.7
million).
Notes to the unaudited preliminary consolidated financial
statements (continued)
The tax
rate on reported profit/loss before tax was 24.2% (2020: -4.6%).
The tax charge comprises:
£
million
|
2021
|
20201
|
Continuing operations
|
|
|
Corporation
tax
|
|
|
Current
year
|
404.0
|
307.8
|
Prior
years
|
(41.4)
|
(83.2)
|
|
362.6
|
224.6
|
Deferred
tax
|
|
|
Current
year
|
(131.0)
|
(80.2)
|
Prior
years
|
(1.5)
|
(17.3)
|
|
(132.5)
|
(97.5)
|
Tax
charge
|
230.1
|
127.1
|
The tax
charge may be affected by the impact of acquisitions, disposals and
other corporate restructurings, the resolution of open tax issues,
and the ability to use brought forward tax losses. Changes in local
or international tax rules, for example, increasing tax rates as a
consequence of the financial support programmes implemented by
governments during the COVID-19 pandemic, the OECD/G20 Inclusive
Framework on Base Erosion and Profit Shifting, and changes arising
from the application of existing rules or challenges by tax or
competition authorities, may expose the Group to additional tax
liabilities or impact the carrying value of deferred tax assets,
which could affect the future tax charge.
Liabilities
relating to open and judgemental matters are based upon an
assessment of whether the tax authorities will accept the position
taken, after taking into account external advice where appropriate.
Where the final tax outcome of these matters is different from the
amounts which were initially recorded then such differences will
impact the current and deferred income tax assets and liabilities
in the period in which such determination is made. The Group does
not currently consider that judgements made in assessing tax
liabilities have a significant risk of resulting in any material
additional charges or credits in respect of these matters, within
the next financial year, beyond the amounts already
provided.
In the
UK Budget on 3 March 2021, the Chancellor of the Exchequer
announced an increase in the UK corporation tax rate from 19% to
25%, which is due to be effective from 1 April 2023. The change was
enacted at the balance sheet date, and the Group has remeasured UK
deferred tax balances accordingly and recognised a tax credit of
£23.8 million in current period tax expense.
9. Ordinary
dividends
The
Board has recommended a final dividend of 18.7p (2020: 14.0p) per
ordinary share in addition to the interim dividend of 12.5p (2020:
10.0p) per share. This makes a total for the year of 31.2p (2020:
24.0p). Payment of the final dividend of 18.7p per ordinary share
will be made on 8 July 2022 to holders of ordinary shares in the
Company on 10 June 2022.
1 Figures have been restated as described in the accounting
policies.
Notes to the unaudited preliminary consolidated financial
statements (continued)
Basic EPS
The
calculation of basic reported and headline EPS is as
follows:
Continuing
operations:
|
2021
|
20201
|
Reported
earnings2 (£ million)
|
637.7
|
(2,971.6)
|
Headline
earnings3 (£ million)
|
954.5
|
742.5
|
Weighted
average shares used in basic EPS calculation (million)
|
1,194.1
|
1,223.0
|
Reported
EPS
|
53.4p
|
(243.0p)
|
Headline
EPS
|
79.9p
|
60.7p
|
Discontinued
operations:
|
2021
|
2020
|
Reported
earnings2 (£ million)
|
-
|
6.5
|
Weighted
average shares used in basic EPS calculation (million)
|
-
|
1,223.0
|
Reported
EPS
|
-
|
0.5p
|
Continuing
and discontinued operations:
|
2021
|
20201
|
Reported
earnings2 (£ million)
|
637.7
|
(2,965.1)
|
Weighted
average shares used in basic EPS calculation (million)
|
1,194.1
|
1,223.0
|
Reported
EPS
|
53.4p
|
(242.5p)
|
Diluted EPS
The
calculation of diluted reported and headline EPS is as
follows:
Continuing
operations:
|
2021
|
20201
|
Diluted
reported earnings (£ million)
|
637.7
|
(2,971.6)
|
Diluted
headline earnings (£ million)
|
954.5
|
742.5
|
Weighted
average shares used in reported diluted EPS calculation
(million)4
|
1,215.3
|
1,223.0
|
Weighted
average shares used in headline diluted EPS calculation
(million)
|
1,215.3
|
1,236.0
|
Diluted
reported EPS
|
52.5p
|
(243.0p)
|
Diluted
headline EPS
|
78.5p
|
60.1p
|
Discontinued
operations:
|
2021
|
2020
|
Diluted
reported earnings (£ million)
|
-
|
6.5
|
Weighted
average shares used in diluted EPS calculation
(million)4
|
-
|
1,223.0
|
Diluted
reported EPS
|
-
|
0.5p
|
1 Figures have been restated as described in the accounting
policies
2 Reported earnings is equivalent to profit for the year
attributable to equity holders of the parent.
3 Headline earnings is defined in Appendix 2.
4 In 2020, the
weighted average shares used in the basic EPS calculation has also
been used for reported diluted EPS due to the anti-dilutive effect
of the weighted average shares calculated for the reported diluted
EPS calculation.
Notes to the unaudited preliminary consolidated financial
statements (continued)
10.
Earnings
per share (continued)
Diluted EPS
Continuing
and discontinued operations:
|
2021
|
20201
|
Diluted
reported earnings (£ million)
|
637.7
|
(2,965.1)
|
Weighted
average shares used in diluted EPS calculation
(million)2
|
1,215.3
|
1,223.0
|
Diluted
reported EPS
|
52.5p
|
(242.5p)
|
A
reconciliation between the shares used in calculating basic and
diluted EPS is as follows:
million
|
2021
|
2020
|
Weighted
average shares used in basic EPS calculation
|
1,194.1
|
1,223.0
|
Dilutive
share options outstanding
|
1.3
|
-
|
Other
potentially issuable shares
|
19.9
|
13.0
|
Weighted
average shares used in diluted EPS calculation
|
1,215.3
|
1,236.0
|
At
31 December 2021 there were 1,224,459,550 (2020:
1,296,080,242) ordinary shares in issue, including treasury shares
of 70,489,953 (2020: 70,748,100).
1 Figures have been restated as described in the accounting
policies.
2 In 2020, the
weighted average shares used in the basic EPS calculation has also
been used for reported diluted EPS due to the anti-dilutive effect
of the weighted average shares calculated for the reported diluted
EPS calculation.
Notes to the unaudited preliminary consolidated financial
statements (continued)
11.
Analysis
of cash flows
The
following tables analyse the items included within the main cash
flow headings on page 18:
Net cash inflow from operating activities:
£
million
|
2021
|
20201
|
Profit/(loss) for the year
|
720.7
|
(2,901.3)
|
Taxation
|
230.1
|
129.3
|
Revaluation
and retranslation of financial instruments
|
87.8
|
147.2
|
Finance
costs
|
283.6
|
312.3
|
Finance
and investment income
|
(69.4)
|
(82.8)
|
Share
of results of associates
|
(23.8)
|
136.0
|
Gain on
sale of discontinued operations
|
-
|
(10.0)
|
Attributable
tax expense on sale of discontinued operations
|
-
|
1.9
|
Operating profit/(loss) of continuing and discontinued
operations
|
1,229.0
|
(2,267.4)
|
Adjustments
for:
|
|
|
Non-cash
share-based incentive plans (including share options)
|
99.6
|
74.4
|
Depreciation
of property, plant and equipment
|
151.2
|
174.8
|
Depreciation
of right-of-use assets
|
272.9
|
331.9
|
Impairment
charges included within restructuring costs
|
39.2
|
196.7
|
Goodwill
impairment
|
1.8
|
2,822.9
|
Amortisation
and impairment of acquired intangible assets
|
97.8
|
89.1
|
Amortisation
of other intangible assets
|
19.9
|
35.2
|
Investment
and other impairment (reversals)/charges
|
(42.4)
|
296.2
|
Losses/(gains)
on disposal of investments and subsidiaries
|
10.6
|
(7.8)
|
Gains
on remeasurement of equity interests arising from a change in scope
of ownership
|
-
|
(0.6)
|
(Gains)/losses
on sale of property, plant and equipment
|
(1.3)
|
0.3
|
Operating cash flow before movements in working capital and
provisions
|
1,878.3
|
1,745.7
|
Movements
in trade working capital2
|
318.9
|
780.2
|
Movements
in other working capital and provisions
|
383.1
|
58.0
|
Cash generated by operations
|
2,580.3
|
2,583.9
|
Corporation
and overseas tax paid
|
(391.1)
|
(371.5)
|
Premium on early settlement of bonds
|
(13.0)
|
-
|
Interest
and similar charges paid
|
(173.7)
|
(173.9)
|
Interest
paid on lease liabilities
|
(88.4)
|
(98.5)
|
Interest
received
|
47.5
|
73.6
|
Investment
income
|
17.8
|
8.7
|
Dividends
from associates
|
53.4
|
32.5
|
Net cash inflow from operating activities
|
2,032.8
|
2,054.8
|
1 Figures have been restated as described in the accounting
policies.
2 Trade working capital represents trade receivables, work
in progress, accrued income, trade payables and deferred
income.
Notes to the unaudited preliminary consolidated financial
statements (continued)
11.
Analysis
of cash flows (continued)
Acquisitions and disposals:
£
million
|
2021
|
2020
|
Initial
cash consideration
|
(227.6)
|
(32.8)
|
Cash and cash equivalents acquired
|
(2.3)
|
-
|
Earnout
payments
|
(57.0)
|
(115.2)
|
Purchase
of other investments (including associates)
|
(99.2)
|
(30.4)
|
Acquisitions
|
(386.1)
|
(178.4)
|
|
|
|
Proceeds
on disposal of investments and subsidiaries1
|
51.9
|
320.0
|
Cash
and cash equivalents disposed
|
(23.6)
|
(47.7)
|
Disposals of investments and subsidiaries
|
28.3
|
272.3
|
|
|
|
Cash consideration received from non-controlling
interests
|
39.5
|
-
|
Cash consideration for purchase of non-controlling
interests
|
(135.0)
|
(80.6)
|
Cash consideration for non-controlling interests
|
(95.5)
|
(80.6)
|
|
|
|
Net acquisition payments and investments
|
(453.3)
|
13.3
|
Share repurchases and buy-backs:
£
million
|
2021
|
2020
|
Purchase
of own shares by ESOP Trusts
|
(89.2)
|
(5.1)
|
Shares
purchased into treasury
|
(729.3)
|
(285.1)
|
|
(818.5)
|
(290.2)
|
Proceeds from borrowings:
£
million
|
2021
|
2020
|
Proceeds
from issue of €750 million bonds
|
-
|
665.5
|
Proceeds
from issue of £250 million bonds
|
-
|
250.0
|
|
-
|
915.5
|
Repayments of borrowings:
£
million
|
2021
|
2020
|
Net
decrease in drawings on bank loans
|
(36.3)
|
(59.6)
|
Repayment of $500 million bonds
|
(360.8)
|
-
|
Repayment
of €250 million bonds
|
-
|
(223.1)
|
|
(397.1)
|
(282.7)
|
1 Proceeds on disposal of investments and subsidiaries
includes return of capital from investments in
associates.
Notes to the unaudited preliminary consolidated financial
statements (continued)
12.
Cash
and cash equivalents and adjusted net debt
£
million
|
2021
|
2020
|
Cash at
bank and in hand
|
2,776.6
|
10,075.0
|
Short-term
bank deposits
|
1,106.3
|
2,824.1
|
Overdrafts1
|
(342.3)
|
(8,562.0)
|
Cash and cash equivalents
|
3,540.6
|
4,337.1
|
Bonds
due within one year
|
(210.2)
|
-
|
Loans
due within one year
|
(14.7)
|
(57.2)
|
Bonds due after one year
|
(4,216.8)
|
(4,975.5)
|
Adjusted net debt
|
(901.1)
|
(695.6)
|
During
the year, the Group converted the majority of its notional cash
pool arrangements to zero-balance accounts, whereby the cash and
overdrafts within these cash pools are physically swept to the
header accounts on a daily basis, resulting in a reduction of the
large gross cash and overdraft positions at 31 December
2020.
The
Group estimates that the fair value of corporate bonds is
£4,790.3 million at 31 December 2021 (2020: £5,509.1
million). The Group considers that the carrying amount of bank
loans approximates their fair value.
The
following table is an analysis of future anticipated cash flows in
relation to the Group’s debt, on an undiscounted basis which,
therefore, differs from the carrying value:
£
million
|
2021
|
2020
|
Within
one year
|
(332.4)
|
(182.2)
|
Between
one and two years
|
(751.0)
|
(725.6)
|
Between
two and three years
|
(652.1)
|
(795.7)
|
Between
three and four years
|
(498.4)
|
(649.1)
|
Between
four and five years
|
(703.6)
|
(528.2)
|
Over
five years
|
(2,568.8)
|
(3,387.1)
|
Debt financing (including interest) under the Revolving Credit
Facility and in relation to unsecured loan notes
|
(5,506.3)
|
(6,267.9)
|
Short-term
overdrafts – within one year
|
(342.3)
|
(8,562.0)
|
Future anticipated cash flows
|
(5,848.6)
|
(14,829.9)
|
Effect
of discounting/financing rates
|
1,064.6
|
1,235.2
|
Debt financing
|
(4,784.0)
|
(13,594.7)
|
Cash
and short-term deposits
|
3,882.9
|
12,899.1
|
Adjusted net debt
|
(901.1)
|
(695.6)
|
1 Bank overdrafts are included in cash and cash equivalents
because they form an integral part of the Group’s cash
management.
Notes to the unaudited preliminary consolidated financial
statements (continued)
13.
Goodwill
and acquisitions
Goodwill
in relation to subsidiary undertakings increased by £223.5
million in the year. This movement primarily relates to goodwill
arising on acquisitions completed in the year and adjustments to
goodwill relating to acquisitions completed in prior years of
£330.4 million, partially offset by the effect of currency
translation of £105.1 million and £1.8 million of
impairment charges.
In
2020, £2,822.9 million of impairment charges were incurred.
The impairments related to historical acquisitions whose carrying
values were reassessed in light of the impact of Covid-19. The
impairments were driven by a combination of higher discount rates
used to value future cash flows, a lower profit base in 2020 and
lower industry growth rates.
The
contribution to revenue and operating profit of acquisitions
completed in the year was not material. There were no material
acquisitions completed during the year or between 31 December
2021 and the date these preliminary consolidated financial
statements were approved.
14.
Other
intangible assets
The
following are included in other intangibles:
£
million
|
2021
|
2020
|
Brands
with an indefinite useful life
|
1,010.5
|
1,059.1
|
Acquired
intangibles
|
273.4
|
240.5
|
Other
(including capitalised computer software)
|
75.6
|
89.7
|
|
1,359.5
|
1,389.3
|
15.
Trade
and other receivables
Amounts falling due within one year:
£
million
|
2021
|
2020
|
Trade
receivables
|
6,600.5
|
6,572.2
|
Work in
progress
|
254.0
|
264.1
|
VAT and
sales taxes recoverable
|
350.3
|
236.6
|
Prepayments
|
215.3
|
248.1
|
Accrued
income
|
3,435.7
|
3,150.1
|
Fair
value of derivatives
|
2.5
|
0.2
|
Other
debtors
|
504.0
|
501.0
|
|
11,362.3
|
10,972.3
|
Notes to the unaudited preliminary consolidated financial
statements (continued)
15.
Trade
and other receivables (continued)
Amounts falling due after more than one year:
£
million
|
2021
|
2020
|
Prepayments
|
3.0
|
2.8
|
Fair
value of derivatives
|
0.5
|
9.6
|
Other
debtors
|
149.1
|
143.8
|
|
152.6
|
156.2
|
The
Group has applied the practical expedient permitted by IFRS 15 to
not disclose the transaction price allocated to performance
obligations unsatisfied (or partially unsatisfied) as of the end of
the reporting period as contracts typically have an original
expected duration of a year or less.
The
Group considers that the carrying amount of trade and other
receivables approximates their fair value.
A
credit to bad debt expense of £10.6 million (2020: expense of
£40.8 million) on the Group’s trade receivables in the
period is a result of the reduction in expected credit losses since
31 December 2020. The allowance for bad and doubtful debts is
equivalent to 1.1% (2020: 1.7%) of gross trade
receivables.
16.
Trade
and other payables: amounts falling due within one
year
£
million
|
2021
|
2020
|
Trade
payables
|
10,596.9
|
10,206.5
|
Deferred
income
|
1,334.0
|
1,153.7
|
Payments
due to vendors (earnout agreements)
|
85.6
|
57.8
|
Liabilities
in respect of put option agreements with vendors
|
58.4
|
9.3
|
Fair
value of derivatives
|
6.4
|
1.8
|
Share
repurchases – close period commitments1
|
211.7
|
-
|
Other
creditors and accruals
|
2,959.3
|
2,430.6
|
|
15,252.3
|
13,859.7
|
The
Group considers that the carrying amount of trade and other
payables approximates their fair value.
1 During 2021, the
Company entered into an arrangement with a third party to conduct
share buybacks on its behalf in the close period commencing on 16
December 2021 and ending on 18 February 2022, in accordance with UK
listing rules. The commitment resulting from this agreement
constitutes a liability at 31 December 2021, which is included
in Trade and other payables: amounts falling due within one year
and has been recognised as a movement in equity.
Notes to the unaudited preliminary consolidated financial
statements (continued)
17.
Trade
and other payables: amounts falling due after more than one
year
£
million
|
2021
|
2020
|
Payments
due to vendors (earnout agreements)
|
111.1
|
56.5
|
Liabilities
in respect of put option agreements with vendors
|
333.1
|
101.4
|
Fair
value of derivatives
|
47.2
|
11.2
|
Other
creditors and accruals
|
128.5
|
144.4
|
|
619.9
|
313.5
|
The
Group considers that the carrying amount of trade and other
payables approximates their fair value.
The
following table sets out payments due to vendors, comprising
contingent consideration and the directors’ best estimates of
future earnout related obligations:
£
million
|
2021
|
2020
|
Within
one year
|
85.6
|
57.8
|
Between
1 and 2 years
|
24.0
|
17.2
|
Between
2 and 3 years
|
35.7
|
6.0
|
Between
3 and 4 years
|
51.4
|
30.5
|
Between
4 and 5 years
|
-
|
2.8
|
Over 5
years
|
-
|
-
|
|
196.7
|
114.3
|
The
Group’s approach to payments due to vendors is outlined in
note 21.
The
Group does not consider there to be any material contingent
liabilities as at 31 December 2021.
18. Issued
share capital
Number
of equity ordinary shares (million)
|
2021
|
2020
|
At the beginning of the year
|
1,296.1
|
1,328.2
|
Exercise of share options
|
0.6
|
-
|
Share
cancellations
|
(72.2)
|
(32.1)
|
At the end of the year
|
1,224.5
|
1,296.1
|
19.
Related
party transactions
The
Group enters into transactions with its associate undertakings. The
Group has continuing transactions with Kantar, including sales,
purchases, the provision of IT services, subleases and property
related items.
In the
year ended 31 December 2021, revenue of £117.2 million
(2020: £90.6 million) was reported in relation to Compas, an
associate in the USA. All other transactions in the years presented
were immaterial.
The
Group invested a further £92.9 million in Kantar in 2021 to
fund its 40% share of the Numerator acquisition.
Notes to the unaudited preliminary consolidated financial
statements (continued)
19.
Related
party transactions (continued)
The
following amounts were outstanding at 31 December
2021:
£ million
|
2021
|
2020
|
Amounts owed by related parties
|
|
|
Kantar
|
30.3
|
39.0
|
Other
|
45.7
|
27.9
|
|
76.0
|
66.9
|
Amounts owed to related parties
|
|
|
Kantar
|
(6.2)
|
(5.6)
|
Other
|
(51.4)
|
(36.0)
|
|
(57.6)
|
(41.6)
|
20.
Going concern and liquidity risk
In
considering going concern and liquidity risk, the Directors have
reviewed the Group’s future cash requirements and earnings
projections. The Directors believe these forecasts have been
prepared on a prudent basis and have also considered the impact of
a range of potential changes to trading performance. The Company
modelled a range of revenue less pass-through costs compared with
the year ended 31 December 2021 and a number of mitigating cost actions that
are available to the Company. Considering the Group's bank covenant
and liquidity headroom and cost mitigation actions which could be
implemented, the Company and the Group would be able to operate
with appropriate liquidity and within its banking covenants and be
able to meet its liabilities as they fall due with a decline in
revenue less pass-through costs up to 30% in 2022.
The
likelihood of such a decline is considered remote. The Directors
have concluded that the Group will be able to operate within its
current facilities and comply with its banking covenants for the
foreseeable future and therefore believe it is appropriate to
prepare the financial statements of the Group on a going concern
basis and that there are no material uncertainties which gives rise
to a significant going concern risk.
At 31 December 2021, the Group has access to £6.3 billion
of committed facilities with maturity dates spread over the years
2022 to 2046 as illustrated below:
£
million
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2022
|
2023
|
2024
|
2025
|
2026+
|
£
bonds £400m (2.875% ‘46)
|
400.0
|
|
|
|
|
400.0
|
US
bond $220m (5.625% ‘43)
|
162.5
|
|
|
|
|
162.5
|
US
bond $93m (5.125% ’42)
|
68.6
|
|
|
|
|
68.6
|
£
bonds £250m (3.750% ‘32)
|
250.0
|
|
|
|
|
250.0
|
Eurobonds
€600m (1.625% ’30)
|
504.5
|
|
|
|
|
504.5
|
Eurobonds
€750m (2.375% ’27)
|
630.6
|
|
|
|
|
630.6
|
Eurobonds
€750m (2.25% ’26)
|
630.6
|
|
|
|
|
630.6
|
Bank
revolver ($2,500m ’26)
|
1,847.5
|
|
|
|
|
1,847.5
|
Eurobonds
€500m (1.375% ’25)
|
420.4
|
|
|
|
420.4
|
|
US
bond $750m (3.75% ’24)
|
554.2
|
|
|
554.2
|
|
|
Eurobonds
€750m (3.0% ’23)
|
630.6
|
|
630.6
|
|
|
|
Eurobonds
€250m (3m EURIBOR + 0.45% ’22)
|
210.2
|
210.2
|
|
|
|
|
Total committed facilities available
|
6,309.7
|
210.2
|
630.6
|
554.2
|
420.4
|
4,494.3
|
Drawn
down facilities at 31 December 2021
|
4,462.2
|
210.2
|
630.6
|
554.2
|
420.4
|
2,646.8
|
Undrawn
committed credit facilities
|
1,847.5
|
|
|
|
|
|
Drawn down facilities at 31 December 2021
|
4,462.2
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net
cash at 31 December 2021
|
(3,540.6)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Other
adjustments
|
(20.5)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Adjusted net debt at 31 December 2021
|
901.1
|
|
|
|
|
|
Given its debt maturity profile and available facilities, the
Directors believe the Group has sufficient liquidity to match its
requirements for the foreseeable future.
Notes to the unaudited preliminary consolidated financial
statements (continued)
21.
Financial
instruments
The
following table provides an analysis of financial instruments that
are measured subsequent to initial recognition at fair value,
grouped into levels 1 to 3 based on the degree to which the fair
value is observable, or based on observable inputs:
£
million
|
Level
1
|
Level 2
|
Level 3
|
Derivatives in designated hedge relationships
|
|
|
|
Derivative
assets
|
-
|
0.5
|
-
|
Derivative
liabilities
|
-
|
(47.2)
|
-
|
Held at fair value through profit or loss
|
|
|
|
Other
investments
|
0.4
|
-
|
227.9
|
Derivative
assets
|
-
|
2.5
|
-
|
Derivative
liabilities
|
-
|
(6.4)
|
-
|
Payments
due to vendors (earnout agreements) (note 17)
|
-
|
-
|
(196.7)
|
Liabilities
in respect of put options
|
-
|
-
|
(391.5)
|
Held at fair value through other comprehensive income
|
|
|
|
Other
investments
|
27.9
|
-
|
62.1
|
Reconciliation of level 3 fair value measurements:
£
million
|
Payments due to vendors (earnout agreements)
|
Liabilities in respect of put options
|
Other investments
|
1 January 2021
|
(114.3)
|
(110.7)
|
366.6
|
Losses
recognised in the income statement
|
(58.7)
|
(40.6)
|
(7.7)
|
Losses
recognised in other comprehensive income
|
-
|
-
|
(42.8)
|
Additions
|
(81.7)
|
(247.7)1
|
5.9
|
Disposals
|
-
|
-
|
(32.0)
|
Cancellations
|
-
|
0.8
|
-
|
Settlements
|
57.0
|
5.4
|
-
|
Exchange
adjustments
|
1.0
|
1.3
|
-
|
31 December 2021
|
(196.7)
|
(391.5)
|
290.0
|
Payments due to vendors and liabilities in respect of put
options
Future
anticipated payments due to vendors in respect of contingent
consideration (earnout agreements) are recorded at fair value,
which is the present value of the expected cash outflows of the
obligations. Liabilities in respect of put option agreements are
initially recorded at the present value of the redemption amount in
accordance with IAS 32 and subsequently measured at fair value in
accordance with IFRS 9. Both types of obligations are dependent on
the future financial performance of the entity and it is assumed
that future profits are in line with directors’ estimates.
The directors derive their estimates from internal business plans
together with financial due diligence performed in connection with
the acquisition.
Other investments
The
fair value of other investments included in level 1 are based on
quoted market prices. Other investments included in level 3 are
unlisted securities, where market value is not readily available.
The Group has estimated relevant fair values on the basis of
publicly available information from outside sources. Certain
investments are valued using revenue multiples.
1 During the year, the
Group merged Finsbury Glover Hering and Sard Verbinnen & Co to
form a leading global strategic communications firm. As a part of
this transaction, certain management acquired shares in the company
and a put option was granted which allows the equity partners to
require the Group to purchase these shares. This resulted in
additions to liabilities in respect of put options in the year of
£219.6 million.
Principal risks and uncertainties
The
Board regularly reviews the principal and emerging risks and
uncertainties affecting the Group and these are summarised
below:
COVID-19 Pandemic
●
The extent of the
continued impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on our business will
depend on numerous factors that we are not able to accurately
predict, including the duration and scope of the pandemic, any
existing or new variants, government actions to mitigate the
effects of the pandemic and the intermediate and long-term impact
of the pandemic on our clients’ spending plans.
Strategic Risks
●
The Group updated
its strategic plan in December 2020, to return the business to
growth and simplify the Group structure. A failure or delay in
implementing and fully realising the benefits from the strategic
plan, may have a material adverse effect on the Group’s
market share and its business, revenues, results of operations,
financial condition, or prospects.
Operational Risks
Clients
●
The Group competes
for clients in a highly competitive and evolving industry which is
undergoing structural change which has been accelerated by the
COVID-19 pandemic. Client loss or consolidation or a reduction in
marketing budgets due to recessionary economic conditions, may have
a material adverse effect on the Group’s market share and its
business, revenues, results of operations, financial condition or
prospects.
●
The Group receives
a significant portion of its revenues from a limited number of
large clients and the net loss of one or more of these clients
could have a material adverse effect on the Group’s
prospects, business, financial condition and results of
operations.
People, Culture and Succession
●
The Group’s
performance could be adversely affected if we do not react quickly
enough to changes in our market and fail to attract, develop and
retain key and diverse creative, commercial technology and
management talent or are unable to retain and incentivise key and
diverse talent.
Cyber and Information Security
●
The Group is
undertaking a series of IT transformation programmes to support the
Group’s strategic plan and a failure or delay in implementing
the IT programmes may have a material adverse effect on its
business, revenues, results of operations, financial conditions or
prospects. The Group is reliant on third parties for the
performance of a significant part of its information technology and
operational functions. A failure to provide these functions
including as a result of a cyber event, could have an adverse
effect on the Group's business. A significant percentage of the
Group’s people continue to work remotely as a consequence of
the COVID-19 pandemic which has the potential to increase the risk
of compromised data security and cyber-attacks.
Financial Risks
●
The Group is
subject to credit risk through the default of a client or other
counterparty.
Compliance Risks
●
The Group is
subject to strict data protection and privacy legislation in the
jurisdictions in which we operate and rely extensively on
information technology systems. The Group stores, transmits and
relies on critical and sensitive data. Security of this type of
data is exposed to escalating external cyber threats that are
increasing in sophistication as well as internal
breaches.
●
The Group’s
performance could be adversely impacted if it failed to ensure
adequate internal control procedures are in place generally and
through the period of remote working as a consequence of the
COVID-19 pandemic.
Principal risks and uncertainties (continued)
Regulatory, Sanctions, Anti-Trust and Taxation
●
The Group may be
subject to regulations restricting its activities or effecting
changes in taxation, for example, as a consequence of the financial
support programmes implemented by governments during the COVID-19
pandemic.
●
The Group is
subject to anti-corruption, anti-bribery and anti-trust legislation
and enforcement in the countries in which it operates and
violations could have an adverse effect on our business and
reputation.
●
Civil liabilities
or judgements against the Company or its Directors or officers
based on United States federal or state securities laws may not be
enforceable in the United States or in England and Wales or in
Jersey.
●
The Group is
subject to the laws of the United States, EU and other
jurisdictions regulating and imposing sanctions on the supply of
services to certain countries. Failure to comply with these laws
could expose the Group to civil and criminal
penalties.
Emerging Risks
●
The Group’s
operations could be disrupted by an increased frequency of extreme
weather and climate related natural disasters as a consequence of
the physical impacts of climate change in the next 30
years.
●
The Group is
subject to increased reputational risk associated with working on
environmentally detrimental client briefs and/or misrepresenting
environmental claims.
●
The group could be
subject to increased costs to comply with potential future changes
in environmental laws and regulations and to meet is net zero
commitments.
Cautionary statement regarding forward-looking
statements
This
document contains statements that are, or may be deemed to be,
“forward-looking statements”. Forward- looking
statements give the Group’s current expectations or forecasts
of future events. An investor can identify these statements by the
fact that they do not relate strictly to historical or current
facts. They use words such as ‘anticipate’,
‘estimate’, ‘expect’, ‘intend’,
‘will’, ‘project’, ‘plan’,
‘believe’, ‘target’ and other words and
terms of similar meaning in connection with any discussion of
future operating or financial performance.
These
forward-looking statements may include, among other things, plans,
objectives, projections and anticipated future economic performance
based on assumptions and the like that are subject to risks and
uncertainties. As such, actual results or outcomes may differ
materially from those discussed in the forward- looking statements.
Important factors which may cause actual results to differ include
but are not limited to: the unanticipated loss of a material client
or key personnel, delays or reductions in client advertising
budgets, shifts in industry rates of compensation, regulatory
compliance costs or litigation, natural disasters or acts of
terrorism, the Company’s exposure to changes in the values of
other major currencies (because a substantial portion of its
revenues are derived and costs incurred outside of the UK) and the
overall level of economic activity in the Company’s major
markets (which varies depending on, among other things, regional,
national and international political and economic conditions and
government regulations in the world’s advertising markets).
In addition, you should consider the risks described under Item 3D
‘Risk Factors’ in the Group’s Annual Report on
Form 20-F for 2020 and any impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic which
could also cause actual results to differ from forward-looking
information. In light of these and other uncertainties, the
forward- looking statements included in this document should not be
regarded as a representation by the Company that the
Company’s plans and objectives will be achieved. Other than
in accordance with its legal or regulatory obligations (including
under the Market Abuse Regulation, the UK Listing Rules and the
Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rules of the Financial Conduct
Authority), the Group undertakes no obligation to update any
forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information,
future events or otherwise. The reader should, however, consult any
additional disclosures that the Group may make in any documents
which it publishes and/or files with the SEC. All readers, wherever
located, should take note of these disclosures. Accordingly, no
assurance can be given that any particular expectation will be met
and investors are cautioned not to place undue reliance on the
forward-looking statements.
Any
forward looking statements made by or on behalf of the Group speak
only as of the date they are made and are based upon the knowledge
and information available to the Directors on the date of this
document
Appendix
2: Alternative performance measures for the year ended 31 December
2021
Management
includes non-GAAP measures as they consider these measures to be
both useful and necessary. They are used by management for internal
performance analyses; the presentation of these measures
facilitates comparability with other companies, although
management’s measures may not be calculated in the same way
as similarly titled measures reported by other companies; and these
measures are useful in connection with discussions with the
investment community.
Reconciliation of revenue to revenue less pass-through
costs:
£
million
|
2021
|
2020
|
Continuing operations
|
|
|
Revenue
|
12,801.1
|
12,002.8
|
Media
pass-through costs
|
(1,865.3)
|
(1,555.2)
|
Other
pass-through costs
|
(538.6)
|
(685.6)
|
Revenue less pass-through costs
|
10,397.2
|
9,762.0
|
Pass-through
costs comprise fees paid to external suppliers when they are
engaged to perform part or all of a specific project and are
charged directly to clients, predominantly media and data
collection costs. This includes the cost of media where the Group
is buying digital media for its own account on a transparent opt-in
basis and, as a result, the subsequent media pass-through costs
have to be accounted for as revenue, as well as billings.
Therefore, management considers that revenue less pass-through
costs gives a helpful reflection of top-line growth.
Reconciliation of operating profit/(loss) to headline operating
profit:
£
million
|
2021
|
2020
|
Continuing operations
|
|
|
Operating profit/(loss)
|
1,229.0
|
(2,278.1)
|
Amortisation
and impairment of acquired intangible assets
|
97.8
|
89.1
|
Goodwill
impairment
|
1.8
|
2,822.9
|
Losses/(gains)
on disposal of investments and subsidiaries
|
10.6
|
(7.8)
|
Gains
on remeasurement of equity interests arising from a change in scope
of ownership
|
-
|
(0.6)
|
Investment and other impairment (reversals)/charges
|
(42.4)
|
296.2
|
Litigation
settlement
|
21.3
|
25.6
|
Restructuring
and transformation costs
|
145.5
|
80.7
|
Restructuring
costs in relation to COVID-19
|
29.9
|
232.5
|
Headline operating profit
|
1,493.5
|
1,260.5
|
|
|
|
Finance
and investment income
|
69.4
|
82.7
|
Finance
costs (excluding interest expense related to lease
liabilities)
|
(192.7)
|
(211.0)
|
|
(123.3)
|
(128.3)
|
|
|
|
Interest cover1 on headline operating
profit
|
12.1 times
|
9.8
times
|
Headline
operating profit is one of the metrics that management uses to
assess the performance of the business.
1 Interest expense
related to lease liabilities is excluded from interest cover as
lease liabilities are excluded from the Group’s key leverage
metrics.
Headline operating profit margin before and after share of results
of associates:
£
million
|
Margin
|
2021
|
Margin
|
2020
|
Continuing operations
|
|
|
|
|
Revenue less pass-through costs
|
|
10,397.2
|
|
9,762.0
|
Headline operating profit
|
14.4%
|
1,493.5
|
12.9%
|
1,260.5
|
Share
of results of associates (excluding exceptional
gains/losses)
|
|
86.1
|
|
10.1
|
Headline PBIT
|
15.2%
|
1,579.6
|
13.0%
|
1,270.6
|
Headline
PBIT is one of the metrics that management uses to assess the
performance of the business.
Calculation of headline EBITDA:
£
million
|
2021
|
2020
|
Continuing operations
|
|
|
Headline
PBIT
|
1,579.6
|
1,270.6
|
Depreciation
of property, plant and equipment
|
151.2
|
174.8
|
Amortisation
of other intangible assets
|
19.9
|
35.2
|
Headline EBITDA (including depreciation of right-of-use
assets)
|
1,750.7
|
1,480.6
|
Depreciation
of right-of-use assets
|
272.9
|
331.9
|
Headline EBITDA
|
2,023.6
|
1,812.5
|
Headline
EBITDA is a key metric that private equity firms, for example, use
for valuing companies, and is one of the metrics that management
uses to assess the performance of the business. Headline EBITDA
(including depreciation of right-of-use assets) is used in the
Group’s key leverage metric.
Reconciliation of profit/(loss) before taxation to headline PBT and
headline earnings:
£
million
|
2021
|
20201
|
Continuing operations
|
|
|
Profit/(loss) before taxation
|
950.8
|
(2,790.6)
|
Amortisation
and impairment of acquired intangible assets
|
97.8
|
89.1
|
Goodwill
impairment
|
1.8
|
2,822.9
|
Losses/(gains) on disposal of investments and
subsidiaries
|
10.6
|
(7.8)
|
Gains
on remeasurement of equity interests arising from a change in scope
of ownership
|
-
|
(0.6)
|
Investment and other impairment (reversals)/charges
|
(42.4)
|
296.2
|
Restructuring
and transformation costs
|
145.5
|
80.7
|
Restructuring
costs in relation to COVID-19
|
29.9
|
232.5
|
Share
of exceptional losses of associates
|
62.3
|
146.1
|
Litigation
settlement
|
21.3
|
25.6
|
Revaluation
and retranslation of financial instruments
|
87.8
|
147.2
|
Headline PBT
|
1,365.4
|
1,041.3
|
Headline
tax charge
|
(327.9)
|
(239.9)
|
Headline
non-controlling interests
|
(83.0)
|
(58.9)
|
Headline earnings
|
954.5
|
742.5
|
Headline
PBT and headline earnings are metrics that management use to assess
the performance of the business.
1 Figures have been restated as described in the accounting
policies.
Calculation of headline taxation:
£
million
|
2021
|
20201
|
Continuing operations
|
|
|
Headline PBT
|
1,365.4
|
1,041.3
|
Tax
charge
|
230.1
|
127.1
|
Tax
credit/(charge) relating to losses/(gains) on disposal of
investments and subsidiaries
|
31.5
|
(2.7)
|
Tax
credit relating to restructuring and transformation
costs
|
38.4
|
14.3
|
Tax
credit relating to restructuring and transformation costs in
relation to COVID-19
|
7.3
|
51.2
|
Tax
(charge)/credit relating to litigation settlement
|
(5.4)
|
5.4
|
Deferred tax impact
of the amortisation of acquired intangible assets and other
goodwill items
|
5.6
|
36.0
|
Deferred
tax relating to gains on disposal of investments and
subsidiaries
|
20.4
|
8.6
|
Headline tax charge
|
327.9
|
239.9
|
Headline
tax rate
|
24.0%
|
23.0%
|
The Group has re-assessed the measure of headline tax rate, as some
associate businesses are classified as US tax partnerships with
their related tax forming part of the headline tax charge, and now
considers the most appropriate metric is to use the headline tax
charge as a percentage of headline PBT (that includes the share of
headline results of associates). The headline tax rate on headline PBT excluding
the share of headline results of associates was 24.0% (2020:
23.0%).
Given
the Group’s geographic mix of profits and the changing
international tax environment, the headline tax rate is expected to
increase over the next few years.
Calculation of headline non-controlling interests:
£
million
|
2021
|
2020
|
Continuing operations
|
|
|
Non-controlling
interests
|
83.0
|
53.9
|
Non-controlling
interests relating to restructuring costs in relation to
COVID-19
|
-
|
5.0
|
Headline non-controlling interests
|
83.0
|
58.9
|
Reconciliation of free cash flow:
£
million
|
2021
|
2020
|
Cash generated by continuing and discontinued
operations
|
2,580.3
|
2,583.9
|
Plus:
|
|
|
Interest
received
|
47.5
|
73.6
|
Investment
income
|
17.8
|
8.7
|
Dividends
from associates
|
53.4
|
32.5
|
Share
option proceeds
|
4.4
|
-
|
Less:
|
|
|
Earnout
payments
|
(57.0)
|
(115.2)
|
Interest
and similar charges paid
|
(173.7)
|
(173.9)
|
Purchase
of property, plant and equipment
|
(263.2)
|
(218.3)
|
Purchase
of other intangible assets (including capitalised computer
software)
|
(29.9)
|
(54.4)
|
Repayment
of lease liabilities
|
(320.7)
|
(300.1)
|
Interest
paid on lease liabilities
|
(88.4)
|
(98.5)
|
Corporation
and overseas tax paid
|
(391.1)
|
(371.5)
|
Dividends
paid to non-controlling interests in subsidiary
undertakings
|
(114.5)
|
(83.3)
|
Free cash flow
|
1,264.9
|
1,283.5
|
1 Figures have been restated as described in the accounting
policies.
The
Group bases its internal cash flow objectives on free cash flow.
Management believes free cash flow is meaningful to investors
because it is the measure of the Group’s funds available for
acquisition related payments, dividends to shareholders, share
repurchases and debt repayment. The purpose of presenting free cash
flow is to indicate the ongoing cash generation within the control
of the Group after taking account of the necessary cash
expenditures of maintaining the capital and operating structure of
the Group (in the form of payments of interest, corporate taxation,
and capital expenditure).
Future restructuring and transformation costs
Further
restructuring and transformation costs are expected from 2022 to
2025, with approximately £350 million in relation to the
continued rollout of the Group’s new ERP system in order to
drive efficiency and collaboration throughout the Group. Costs of
between £200 and £250 million are also expected in
relation to other IT transformation projects, shared service
centres and co-locations.
Constant currency and pro forma
(‘like-for-like’)
These
preliminary consolidated financial statements are presented in
pounds sterling. However, the Group’s significant
international operations give rise to fluctuations in foreign
exchange rates. To neutralise foreign exchange impact and
illustrate the underlying change in revenue and profit from one
year to the next, the Group has adopted the practice of discussing
results in both reportable currency (local currency results
translated into pounds sterling at the prevailing foreign exchange
rate) and constant currency.
Management
also believes that discussing pro forma or like-for-like
contributes to the understanding of the Group’s performance
and trends because it allows for meaningful comparisons of the
current year to that of prior years.
Further
details of the constant currency and pro forma methods are given in
the glossary on page 45.
Glossary and basis of preparation
Average adjusted net debt and adjusted net debt
Average
adjusted net debt is calculated as the average daily net borrowings
of the Group. Adjusted net debt at a period end is calculated as
the sum of the net borrowings of the Group, derived from the cash
ledgers and accounts in the balance sheet. Adjusted net debt
excludes lease liabilities.
Billings and estimated net new billings
Billings
comprise the gross amounts billed to clients in respect of
commission-based/fee-based income together with the total of other
fees earned. Net new billings represent the estimated annualised
impact on billings of new business gained from both existing and
new clients, net of existing client business lost. The estimated
impact is based upon initial assessments of the clients’
marketing budgets, which may not necessarily result in actual
billings of the same amount.
Constant currency
The
Group uses US dollar-based, constant currency models to measure
performance. These are calculated by applying budgeted 2021
exchange rates to local currency reported results for the current
and prior year, which excludes any variances attributable to
foreign exchange rate movements.
Exceptional gains/losses
Exceptional
gains/losses include gains/losses on disposal of investments and
subsidiaries, gains/losses on remeasurement of equity interests
arising from a change in scope of ownership, investment and other
impairment (reversals)/charges, litigation settlement,
restructuring and transformation costs, restructuring costs in
relation to COVID-19 and share of exceptional gains/losses of
associates.
Free cash flow
Free
cash flow is calculated as cash generated by operations plus
dividends received from associates, interest received, investment
income received, and proceeds from the issue of shares, less
corporation and overseas tax paid, interest and similar charges
paid, dividends paid to non-controlling interests in subsidiary
undertakings, repayment of lease liabilities (including interest),
earnout payments and purchases of property, plant and equipment and
purchases of other intangible assets.
General and administrative costs
General
and administrative costs include marketing costs, certain
professional fees, and an allocation of other costs, including
staff and establishment costs, based on the function of employees
within the Group.
Headline earnings
Headline
PBT less headline tax charge and non-controlling
interests.
Headline EBITDA
Profit
before finance income/costs and revaluation and retranslation of
financial instruments, taxation, gains/losses on disposal of
investments and subsidiaries, investment and other impairment
(reversals)/charges, goodwill impairment and other goodwill
write-downs, amortisation and impairment of acquired intangible
assets, amortisation of other intangibles, depreciation of
property, plant and equipment, depreciation of right-of-use assets,
restructuring and transformation costs, restructuring costs in
relation to COVID-19, litigation settlement, share of exceptional
gains/losses of associates and gains/losses on remeasurement of
equity interests arising from a change in scope of
ownership.
Headline non-controlling interests
Non-controlling
interests excluding non-controlling interests relating to
restructuring costs in relation to COVID-19.
Headline operating profit
Operating
profit before gains/losses on disposal of investments and
subsidiaries, investment and other impairment (reversals)/charges,
goodwill impairment and other goodwill write-downs, amortisation
and impairment of acquired intangible assets, restructuring and
transformation costs, restructuring costs in relation to COVID-19,
litigation settlement, and gains/losses on remeasurement of equity
interests arising from a change in scope of ownership.
Headline PBIT
Profit
before finance income/costs and revaluation and retranslation of
financial instruments, taxation, gains/losses on disposal of
investments and subsidiaries, investment and other impairment
(reversals)/charges, goodwill impairment and other goodwill
write-downs, amortisation and impairment of acquired intangible
assets, restructuring and transformation costs, restructuring costs
in relation to COVID-19, litigation settlement, share of
exceptional gains/losses of associates and gains/losses on
remeasurement of equity interests arising from a change in scope of
ownership.
Headline operating profit margin
Headline
operating profit margin is calculated as headline operating profit
as a percentage of revenue less pass-through costs.
Headline PBT
Profit
before taxation, gains/losses on disposal of investments and
subsidiaries, investment and other impairment (reversals)/charges,
goodwill impairment and other goodwill write-downs, amortisation
and impairment of acquired intangible assets, restructuring and
transformation costs, restructuring costs in relation to COVID-19,
litigation settlement, share of exceptional gains/losses of
associates, gains/losses arising from the revaluation and
retranslation of financial instruments and gains/losses on
remeasurement of equity interests arising from a change in scope of
ownership.
Headline tax charge
Taxation
excluding tax/deferred tax relating to gains/losses on disposal of
investments and subsidiaries, investment and other impairment
(reversals)/charges, goodwill impairment and other goodwill
write-downs, restructuring and transformation costs, restructuring
costs in relation to COVID-19, litigation settlement, and the
deferred tax impact of the amortisation of acquired intangible
assets and other goodwill items.
Net working capital
The
movement in net working capital consists of movements in trade
working capital and movements in other working capital and
provisions per the analysis of cash flows note.
Pass-through costs
Pass-through
costs comprise fees paid to external suppliers where they are
engaged to perform part or all of a specific project and are
charged directly to clients, predominantly media
costs.
Pro forma (‘like-for-like’)
Pro
forma comparisons are calculated as follows: current year, constant
currency actual results (which include acquisitions from the
relevant date of completion) are compared with prior year, constant
currency actual results, adjusted to include the results of
acquisitions and disposals, the reclassification of certain
businesses to associates in 2021 and the restatement of agency
arrangements under IFRS 15 for the commensurate period in the prior
year. The Group uses the terms ‘pro forma’ and
‘like-for-like’ interchangeably.
Revenue less pass-through costs
Revenue
less pass-through costs is revenue less media and other
pass-through costs.
1 Percentage change in reported
sterling.
2 Like-for-like. LFL comparisons are calculated as
follows: current year, constant currency actual results (which
include acquisitions from the relevant date of completion) are
compared with prior year, constant currency actual results,
adjusted to reflect the results of acquisitions and disposals and
the reclassification of certain businesses to associates in 2021
and the reassessment of agency arrangements under IFRS 15 for the
commensurate period in the prior year.
3
Figures have been restated as
described in the accounting policies in Appendix
1.
4
In this press release not all of the
figures and ratios used are readily available from the unaudited
preliminary results included in Appendix 1. Management believes
these non-GAAP measures, including constant currency and
like-for-like growth, revenue less pass-through costs and headline
profit measures, are both useful and necessary to better understand
the Group’s results. Where required, details of how these
have been arrived at are shown in Appendix 2.
5
Billings, as defined in the glossary
on page 45.
6 All references to estimates and forecasts for
advertising spend exclude US political
advertising
7 Generation Z: Building a Better Normal, Wunderman
Thompson Intelligence, December 2020
8 Kantar Purpose 2020 Report
9
Figures have been restated as described in the
accounting policies in Appendix 1.
10 Certain businesses were reclassified to
associates as the Group no longer controls them. In addition,
certain media billings recognised as revenue earlier in the year
have been re-assessed under IFRS 15: “Revenue from Contracts
with Customers” and have been excluded from revenue, but have
no impact on revenue less pass-through costs. There
are no adjustments to previously reported revenue in the first
three quarters of 2021 or the 2020 financial
year.
11 Asia Pacific, Latin America, Africa & Middle
East and Central & Eastern Europe
SIGNATURES
Pursuant to the
requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant
has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the
undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.
|
WPP
PLC
|
|
(Registrant)
|
Date:
24 February 2022
|
By:
______________________
|
|
Balbir
Kelly-Bisla
|
|
Company
Secretary
|
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