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Trending tickers: ITV, Nissan, Warner Bros Discovery, Balfour Beatty

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A wide closeup of the picket line during the writers and actors strike in front of Paramount Studios
ITV was hit by the writers and actors strike last year, · Erik Morgan

ITV (ITV.L)

Broadcasting giant ITV has revealed a 16% plunge in revenues from its production arm after taking a hit from last year's US writers' and actors' strike.

The group said revenues tumbled to £382m in the three months to March 31 from £457m a year earlier.

It also expects to see ITV Studios’ revenues fall again over the second quarter after the strike action, which was one of the longest in the industry’s history, brought productions to a halt in 2023.

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The firm, which is behind TV shows I’m A Celebrity... Get Me Out Of Here! and Love Island, previously warned the strikes would delay around £80m of revenues from 2024 into 2025. In its latest update, it expects ITV Studios’ revenues to be “broadly flat” overall in 2024.

Total advertising revenues rose 3% in the first quarter and it is expecting an 8% jump in the half-year to 30 June, with the upcoming UEFA European Football Championship driving ad demand.

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"After a tough period last year, shares in ITV have been rebounding in 2024 – in March the company said it is seeing more confidence in the advertising market and it enjoyed its biggest drama success in more than a decade last quarter, Mr Bates vs The Post Office helping to boost investor confidence in the business," Victoria Scholar, head of investment at Interactive Investor, said.

"ITV is also hoping for a boost from programmes like Hells Kitchen US in the second half of the year and it is also pinning its hopes on stronger ad revenues around the Euros football championships, which begin in June.”

Nissan (4021.T)

Nissan stock rose overnight after it revealed it almost doubled its full-year net profit over the last 12 months.

The Japanese carmaker said demand was rising at home and in North America, Europe and China, where it has previously struggled to compete with fast-growing electric vehicle firms backed by Beijing.

Profit totalled 426.6 billion yen (£2.2bn), up 92.3%, however, Nissan expects that to fall by about 10% to 380 billion yen (£2bn) in 2024-25.

Operating income rose more than 50%, thanks to “an increase in sales volume, improved net sales per unit and disciplined management of fixed costs.”

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It also forecast a dip in earnings as a boost from a weakening yen fades. Makoto Uchida, chief executive, said: "In the mid and long term, whether it’s a strong or weak yen... volatility in forex markets is not very beneficial. It will be a challenge.”