Index  ›  business  ›  City AM
business · City AM ↗

UK ad market to be overtaken by China in 2009

City AM Published Jul 6, 2009 Reviewed Jul 2, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
Citation-ready fact
UK ad spend is forecast to decline by 10.5% to £11bn in 2009.
10.5 % · UK ad spend11000000000 GBP · UK ad spend
ZenithOptimedia, media buying group
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
China ad spend is forecast to grow by 5.4% in 2009, overtaking the UK to become the world’s fourth-largest ad market.
5.4 % · China ad spend
ZenithOptimedia, media buying group
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
Global ad spend is forecast to fall by 8.5% to $456.5bn (£278.58bn) in 2009.
8.5 % · global ad spend456500000000 USD · global ad spend278580000000 GBP · global ad spend
ZenithOptimedia, media buying group
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
ZenithOptimedia previously forecast a UK ad spend decline of 8.7% three months earlier.
8.7 % · UK ad spend decline
ZenithOptimedia, media buying group
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
ZenithOptimedia expects UK ad spend to decline by 1.4% to £10.65bn in 2010.
1.4 % · UK ad spend10650000000 GBP · UK ad spend
ZenithOptimedia, media buying group
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
ZenithOptimedia previously forecast UK ad spend to rise by 2.3% in 2010.
2.3 % · UK ad spend
ZenithOptimedia, media buying group
View source ↗

THE UK looks set to lose its position as the fourth-largest advertising market, according to experts at ZenithOptimedia who significantly downgraded UK advertising spend forecasts yesterday.

Publicis-owned ZenithOptimedia estimated that UK ad spend will decline by 10.5 per cent to £11bn in 2009having predicted a decline of 8.7 per cent just three months ago.

We forecast China to grow 5.4 per cent this year, overtaking the UK to become the world’s fourth-largest ad market,” the report said.

The media buying group also said it expects a 1.4 per cent decline £10.65bn in 2010, a reversal on its previous forecast of a rise of 2.3 per cent. However, on a global basis, ZenithOptimedia said the downturn is approaching its lowest point and, after a fall of 8.5 per cent to $456.5bn (£278.58bn) in 2009, the industry should see a mild recovery in 2010, driven by the Winter Olympics, the FIFA World Cup and US midterm elections.

This article was originally published by City AM ↗. citations.press indexes the source-backed facts above and links to the original. Something wrong? Corrections policy · Report an error