Analyst: TV Upfront Is Healthy, But Effects Could Be Short-Term

Although the TV upfront market seems strong to many, one analyst says this could be short-lived for advertising selling periods going forward, as a result of long-term advertising factors.

TV advertising as it relates to GDP growth and industrial production has been getting “weaker,” says a Barclays Research report. And in the next two to three years, this could accelerate for cable TV networks.

For example, the ratio of advertising-to-U.S. gross domestic product has been falling for over a decade, given the “deflationary effect of digital advertising.” The ratio is now between 0.9% and 1.0%, falling steadily from a high of 1.4% and 1.5% in 2000.

Although TV executives have been proclaiming that ad money is coming back to traditional TV from digital this year, Barclays disagrees, saying “television’s share of total advertising has fallen over the last few years.” TV advertising has seen compounded growth per year of 1.6% from 2011 to 2015.

Barclays warns there could be “weaker than expected political spending” as well as continued emergence of new digital distribution TV models. This is especially true for the highly valuable sports TV programming, with new platforms developing, such as “Thursday Night Football” on Twitter.

For this upfront period, Barclays estimates, from a number of trade press sources, that NBC has been posting 11% to 13% gains in the cost per thousand viewers over a year ago; CBS, at 9% to 10%; and ABC and Fox, each at 8.5% to 10%.

But it adds: “It should be noted that we do not mean to imply a trend based on these data points, as it is unclear what price levels actually indicate in terms of mix of volumes.”

Overall, the report says, it is “tough to extrapolate upfront results.”

3 comments about "Analyst: TV Upfront Is Healthy, But Effects Could Be Short-Term ".
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  1. Ed Papazian from Media Dynamics Inc, July 8, 2016 at 11:08 a.m.

    Isn't Barclay's aware of the distinction between branding ads and all other ads?What's important for TV ad sellers is not their share of all ads, including search, direct response, classifieds, sales service, etc, as well as pure branding campaigns, but how they are doing in the latter category which represents over 90% of their ad dollars. Here, digital's inroads, so far, are surprisingly limited. I'm surprised at such a superficial analysis.

  2. Leonard Zachary from T___n__ replied, July 11, 2016 at 12:53 p.m.

    Ed your analysis is again flawed.

    Merely stating "Here, digital's inroads, so far, are surprisingly limited" to an existing $70B industry in the U.S. which includes mobile is illogical.

    Looking at the Digital momentum and where it's going, the TV Upfronts are a Dead Cat bounce.

    TV lacks any semblance of a cohesive strategic or game plan for Technology or Attribution and unfortunately, content alone will not win the day given the existing cost structures of the legacy companies.

    Happy to discuss and enlighten you.

  3. Ed Papazian from Media Dynamics Inc, July 11, 2016 at 1:51 p.m.

    Twas brillig and the slithy toves. Did gyre andgimble in the wabe.

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