
Ad firm Interpublic beats quarterly estimates on resilient client spending
The results are the latest sign that ad spending is holding firm in an uncertain economy, after French ad giant Publicis (PUBP.PA), opens new tab and Omnicom (OMC.N), opens new tab also reported upbeat earnings. Increasing use of AI for creating ads has sparked worries about the industry that has long been the creative voice for brands.
Interpublic benefited in the April-June quarter from strong spending from its media and healthcare-focused businesses, as well as growth in its sports marketing and public relations units, CEO Philippe Krakowsky said.
The company, which last year signed a $13.25 billion merger with Omnicom to create the world's largest ad agency and better navigate the changing industry landscape, also said it expects the deal to close in the second half of the year.
Interpublic's media services are managed through IPG Mediabrands, which includes brands such as Initiative and Mediahub. Its healthcare marketing is managed under the unified IPG Health network.
The company reported second-quarter revenue of $2.54 billion, compared with analysts' average estimate of $2.17 billion, according to data compiled by LSEG.
Its adjusted profit per share of 75 cents also beat the estimate of 56 cents.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


NBC News
11 minutes ago
- NBC News
Credit card startup Imprint beats big banks for Rakuten co-brand deal
There's a new player making waves in an industry dominated by big banks. Imprint, the 5-year-old credit card startup, beat out banks in a competitive bidding process for a new co-branded card from online shopping platform Rakuten, CNBC has learned. The deal is the most recent sign that Imprint is gaining traction in the co-branded credit card industry. The New York-based startup also just raised $70 million in additional capital, boosting its valuation by 50% to $900 million less than a year from its previous round, according to Imprint CEO Daragh Murphy. Credit card partnerships with retailers, airlines and hotels are some of the most hotly contested deals in finance. Brands often go through extensive bidding processes to select a card company, while the companies compete for the right to issue cards to millions of loyal customers. The industry's largest players include JPMorgan Chase, Capital One, Citigroup and Synchrony. 'We're talking to Fortune 500 companies about being their partner and them choosing us over Synchrony, over Barclays, over U.S. Bank,' Murphy said in an interview. 'We have to kind of walk and talk like we're a big, important company, even though we still have a startup ethos.' That's why the company recently raised capital, bringing its total to $330 million, most of which is held on the firm's balance sheet, according to Murphy. Those funds help show potential partners that Imprint has staying power, he said. Imprint also has about $1.5 billion in credit lines from banks including Citigroup, Truist and Mizuho, which it uses to extend loans to card customers, Murphy said. The startup is behind the cards from brands including Eddie Bauer, Brooks Brothers and Turkish Airlines. 'Banks are in trouble' To offer its credit cards, Imprint usually partners with one of two small banks, First Electronic Bank or First Bank and Trust. Imprint handles the customer experience, including the technology and credit decisions, while using the credit card rails of regulated banks. In the case of the Rakuten card, Imprint is relying on the American Express network, which allows users to get Amex purchase protections and other perks. It is using First Electronic Bank to help issue the cards. 'Though we're not a regulated bank, we're effectively building a bank,' Murphy said. 'We have to do all the same things as a bank. We're a capital markets company; we're a compliance company; we're a risk and credit and fraud company; we're a technology company.' To gain a toehold in the market for co-branded cards, which can be used anywhere credit cards are accepted, Imprint decided it would focus on a seamless digital experience for customers, Murphy said. That requires technology integration that is difficult for established players who rely on third-party companies including Fiserv to complete transactions, he said. 'The banks are in trouble because they don't own the technology that the credit card runs on,' Murphy said. 'Every credit card in your wallet, whether it's Chase … or from Citi or Synchrony, they rely on two or three different third parties to power the technology.' Fees & rewards Imprint also decided to set itself apart by making it easy for customers to pay off their loans, Murphy said. Card companies including Bread Financial and Synchrony make a far larger percentage of revenue from late fees than Imprint does, he said. 'You shouldn't have all these regressive late fees, and you shouldn't make it hard to pay,' Murphy said. 'The easier we make it to pay, the more likely you are to use the card, and the more likely you are to use the card, the better it is for everybody.' Finally, Murphy said the company's low customer acquisition costs allow it to fund more rewards for card users. The new Rakuten card, for instance, offers users an extra 4% in cash back in addition to what customers earn through shopping on the online portal, capped at $7,000 in spending per year. Users also earn 10% in cash back while dining at Rakuten's partner restaurants, and 2% cash back on groceries and non-partner restaurants. discontinued in 2022.


Reuters
11 minutes ago
- Reuters
Analog chipmaker Texas Instruments forecasts third-quarter revenue above estimates
July 22 (Reuters) - Texas Instruments (TXN.O), opens new tab forecast third-quarter revenue above Wall Street estimates on Tuesday, signaling recovering demand for its analog chips even as U.S. tariff negotiations lead to macroeconomic uncertainty. The company expects revenue in the range of $4.45 billion to $4.80 billion for the third quarter, compared with analysts' average estimate of $4.59 billion, according to data compiled by LSEG.


Reuters
11 minutes ago
- Reuters
Kohl's shares jump as retail traders drive 'meme-stock'-like rally
July 22 (Reuters) - Shares of Kohl's Corp (KSS.N), opens new tab briefly doubled in value on Tuesday, as retail traders piled into the U.S. department store chain's stocks and options, making it one of the most actively traded stocks on retail trading platforms. Kohl's shares opened up about 100% at a 10-month high of $21.23 on Tuesday, triggering a trading halt, before paring gains to trade up 39% at $14.48, late in the afternoon. With little news to spur a move of that magnitude, analysts said the trading was reminiscent of the price and trading volume surges seen during the 'meme-stock' rally from 2021 in highly shorted retail favorites such as GameStop (GME.N), opens new tab and AMC Entertainment (AMC.N), opens new tab. On Tuesday, Kohl's topped the list of trending tickers on retail investor forum Stocktwits. "Kohl's has a lot of (fundamental) issues and yet this kind of crazy group move up just exemplifies what's happening with the retail investor where they're going to hop on superfast momentum stocks that we love to call meme stocks and hope to be able to make money," said Kim Forrest, chief investment officer at Bokeh Capital Partners. Retail investors have remerged as a potent force in markets in recent months as U.S. stocks overcame their tariff-induced April swoon to reclaim record highs, even as institutional investors have taken a more cautious approach to piling back into stocks. On Tuesday, about 183 million shares traded hands by 2:20 p.m. ET, about 25 times the stock's 25-day moving average volume, according to LSEG data. In the options market, Kohl's made the list of the 10 most actively traded names by volume, rubbing shoulders with much larger companies, including other retail favorites Nvidia and Tesla. Overall Kohl's options volume stood at 360,000 contracts, or about 12 times its average daily trading volume, according to options analytics firm Trade Alert. Call options betting on the shares rising above $17.50 by Friday were the most actively traded Kohl's options with trading volume topping 32,000. "That's new trades and based on little news that I see, pure speculation," said Ophir Gottlieb, chief executive of Los Angeles-based Capital Market Laboratories. Through Friday, Kohl's shares have shed about a third of their value this year as the company, which fired its CEO in May for a personal relationship with a vendor, has come under attack from short sellers. About 49% of Kohl's outstanding shares available for trading are shorted, LSEG data showed, leading to some analysts viewing Tuesday's price move as partially driven by a short-squeeze. A short squeeze occurs when investors who had sold borrowed shares in the hopes of making money from a share price decline are forced to buy shares to close their losing positions. "This is reminiscent of a coordinated move by many investors to chase a high short float stock," Gottlieb said. Meme stock rally burst into the open in 2021 when the COVID-19 lockdowns boosted savings, policy stimulus put cash into people's pockets and extremely low interest rates pushed investors to the stock market. Earlier this week, other highly shorted stocks such as Opendoor Technologies (OPEN.O), opens new tab also witnessed strong retail interest. The online residential real estate platform's shares were up 10%, having gained more than 300% over the past six sessions.