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Publicis Grabs the Last Partner at the Digital Dance

Publicis Grabs the Last Partner at the Digital Dance

(Bloomberg Opinion) -- Publicis Groupe SA Chief Executive Officer Arthur Sadoun isn’t exactly betting the farm, but he’s certainly staking some very substantial pastures.

The advertising executive is writing a hefty $4.4 billion check to acquire digital marketing upstart Epsilon from Alliance Data Systems Corp. That’s a quarter of Publicis’s enterprise value, according to Bloomberg Intelligence analyst Matthew Bloxham. The firm predicts Epsilon will add 13 percent to earnings per share in the first year.

By the time the firms have realized 60 million euros ($68 million) in annualized savings by 2022, the acquisition will generate returns of close to 5 percent, based on last year’s published earnings. That’s hardly stellar. Still, the deal is probably worth it.

Epsilon’s business comprises four main attractions:

  • Data Management: pools of user data which can be used to anticipate consumer purchasing patterns;
  • Identity resolution: digital tools which make it easier for an advertiser to track web users across different devices and therefore target ads more effectively;
  • Loyalty program management: Epsilon runs loyalty programs for firms such as Dell Technologies Inc., BP Plc and Walgreens Boots Alliance Inc.;
  • Creative agency: the unit closest to the classic advertising business, developing new campaigns.

For Sadoun, the first two parts are parts are likely to be the most attractive. They’re also the source of growth – declines at the creative arm dragged Epsilon’s revenue down in 2018.

The big gamble is that Publicis, as the world’s third-biggest ad agency, will be able to open more doors for Epsilon. With storied agencies such as Leo Burnett and Saatchi & Saatchi in the group, Sadoun and his colleagues have a Rolodex of chief marketing officers at the world’s biggest brands.

That should give Epsilon more clout to win top-tier clients that they might have struggled to reach as a unit of Alliance Data, whose main business is private label and commercial credit card programs. For instance, Epsilon will get a lot more international exposure – it currently gets 97 percent of its revenue from the U.S., while Publicis derives 54 percent of sales from North America.

Sadoun needs the bet to pay off: his firm’s revenue fell in the first quarter. It will take time for Epsilon to broaden its reach. And there will be a notable impact on debt ratios:  Average net debt rises to 2.6 times Ebitda from 0.9 times, according to Bloomberg Intelligence analyst Aidan Cheslin. That will gobble up any oxygen for further big deals – but it's hard to find another asset that would be worth the money.

Publicis Grabs the Last Partner at the Digital Dance

Epsilon is the last available acquisition target with vast amounts of digital user information, the sort of data that ad firms otherwise have to buy from third parties. The two other players – Acxiom and Merkle – were acquired by Interpublic Group and Dentsu Inc. respectively in recent years. 

Publicis is paying less for Epsilon as a multiple of Ebitda than IPG did for Acxiom, and it’s getting more bang for its buck: IPG only acquired the data arm, not the identity resolution component. At least Sadoun isn’t paying a higher premium by coming late to the party. 

Publicis Grabs the Last Partner at the Digital Dance

Though Publicis is halting a 1.96 billion-euro buyback program started last summer, shareholders seem to be on his side for now: the shares rose about 4 percent on Monday, the biggest gain in a year. 

Sadoun’s bet is a substantial one. But he has all the tools to make it work.

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Jennifer Ryan at jryan13@bloomberg.net

This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners.

Alex Webb is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering Europe's technology, media and communications industries. He previously covered Apple and other technology companies for Bloomberg News in San Francisco.

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