The combined company will be called Publicis Omnicom Group and be jointly led by Omnicom CEO John Wren and Publicis CEO Maurice Levy as co-chief executives. The move is designed to bolster the companies' focus on growing Asian and Latin American markets such as China and Brazil, where they each have ramped up operations to counter lackluster growth in weak European markets.
But although a combined firm will allow for more pricing power in general, the decrease in competition could present regulatory hurdles in the US and Europe.
Omnicom Group Inc., based in New York, owns BBDO Worldwide, DDB Worldwide Communications Group and TBWA Worldwide, among other agencies.
Paris-based Publicis Groupe SA runs its namesake agency as well as Leo Burnett Worldwide, Saatchi & Saatchi and DigitasLBi.
Their merger creates a company with combined annual revenue of about USD 23 billion, leapfrogging them over current London-based industry leader WPP PLC.
For the first year, Omnicom Chairman Bruce Crawford will serve as non-executive chairman of the new company. He will be succeeded by Elizabeth Badinter, the current Publicis Groupe chairwoman, and daughter of its founder, for the second year.
Earlier this month, the Madison Avenue giant posted second-quarter earnings that topped analysts' average forecast, though revenue growth of 2 percent fell just short of expectations.
Founded in 1986, Omnicom generates just over half of its revenue from US clients, and about one-quarter from European and British markets combined.
The company's stock has risen 31 per cent in the last 12 months, recently peaking at USD 67.43 on the New York Stock Exchange.
Publicis, which had revenue of USD 8.78 billion in 2012, had targeted generating 75 per cent of its revenue in digital and fast-growing countries by 2018, according to a recent investor presentation.
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