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Global Entertainment and Media Spending Set to Rise

Expenditures expected to hit $1.6 bil. in 2013, per PwC

June 16, 2009

- Georg Szalai


adweek/photos/stylus/80479-computerMoney.jpg
NEW YORK Global entertainment and media spending will rise to $1.6 trillion in 2013, amounting to 2.7 percent compound annual growth driven by digital gains, according to PricewaterhouseCoopers' annual "Global Entertainment and Media Outlook 2009-2013."

But U.S. gains will underperform the worldwide trend, with the domestic entertainment and media market expected to grow at a 1.2 percent compound annual growth rate to reach $495 billion in 2013. The advisory firm also sees U.S. consumer spending on media and entertainment as the main growth driver over the five-year period, while advertising is projected to decline.

The share of digital media revenue will further expand in the coming years. It will grow from 17 percent of U.S. revenue in 2008 to 25 percent by 2013, according to PwC's projections. Mobile and other digital platforms will account for the largest chunk of growth in the years ahead, it added.

"The current economic slowdown, shifting consumer behavior and new ad-supported revenue models are triggering acceleration of digital migration," said Bill Cobourn, U.S. leader, entertainment, media and communications practice at PwC. "The current decline in revenues is not because of declining demand. In fact, demand for E&M appears to be increasing. The challenge is to identify ad models that are able to withstand the downward pressure on ad rates in the digital environment and on subscription models that capture the consumers' preferences for premium content."

According to the PwC report, Internet access and advertising spending will continue to outperform other media sectors in the U.S. over the five-year period analyzed. They will show compound annual growth rates (CAGR) of 9.1 percent and 6.3 percent, respectively. Video games at 5.8 percent and TV subscriptions with 5.5 percent are projected to follow.

However, filmed entertainment CAGR will amount to only 3.3 percent in the U.S., and TV advertising is seen declining 0.6 percent, with recorded music expected to drop 4.7 percent on a compound annual basis.

Overall U.S. consumer spending rather than ad expenditures will be the main driver of gains. PwC sees 1.9 percent CAGR in the former, but a 1.7 percent decline in the latter over the five-year period.

More PwC: "No Mag Recovery Until 2013"

More PwC: "Mixed Forecast for OOH"

More PwC: "Growth in Gaming Still On"

More PwC: "U.S. Newspaper Biz to Lose $25 Bil."

Nielsen Business Media


Global Entertainment and Media Spending Set to Rise

Expenditures expected to hit $1.6 bil. in 2013, per PwC

June 16, 2009

- Georg Szalai


adweek/photos/stylus/80479-computerMoney.jpg

NEW YORK Global entertainment and media spending will rise to $1.6 trillion in 2013, amounting to 2.7 percent compound annual growth driven by digital gains, according to PricewaterhouseCoopers' annual "Global Entertainment and Media Outlook 2009-2013."

But U.S. gains will underperform the worldwide trend, with the domestic entertainment and media market expected to grow at a 1.2 percent compound annual growth rate to reach $495 billion in 2013. The advisory firm also sees U.S. consumer spending on media and entertainment as the main growth driver over the five-year period, while advertising is projected to decline.

The share of digital media revenue will further expand in the coming years. It will grow from 17 percent of U.S. revenue in 2008 to 25 percent by 2013, according to PwC's projections. Mobile and other digital platforms will account for the largest chunk of growth in the years ahead, it added.

"The current economic slowdown, shifting consumer behavior and new ad-supported revenue models are triggering acceleration of digital migration," said Bill Cobourn, U.S. leader, entertainment, media and communications practice at PwC. "The current decline in revenues is not because of declining demand. In fact, demand for E&M appears to be increasing. The challenge is to identify ad models that are able to withstand the downward pressure on ad rates in the digital environment and on subscription models that capture the consumers' preferences for premium content."

According to the PwC report, Internet access and advertising spending will continue to outperform other media sectors in the U.S. over the five-year period analyzed. They will show compound annual growth rates (CAGR) of 9.1 percent and 6.3 percent, respectively. Video games at 5.8 percent and TV subscriptions with 5.5 percent are projected to follow.

However, filmed entertainment CAGR will amount to only 3.3 percent in the U.S., and TV advertising is seen declining 0.6 percent, with recorded music expected to drop 4.7 percent on a compound annual basis.

Overall U.S. consumer spending rather than ad expenditures will be the main driver of gains. PwC sees 1.9 percent CAGR in the former, but a 1.7 percent decline in the latter over the five-year period.

More PwC: "No Mag Recovery Until 2013"

More PwC: "Mixed Forecast for OOH"

More PwC: "Growth in Gaming Still On"

More PwC: "U.S. Newspaper Biz to Lose $25 Bil."

Nielsen Business Media


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