Person holding mobile phone with logo of British market research company YouGov
The shock warning also raises questions about the success of YouGov’s acquisition of GfK’s Consumer Panel Services business © Timon Schneider/Alamy

YouGov plies its trade working out what people think. Intricate polling is not necessary to gauge the sentiments of its shareholders: a profit warning in an unscheduled trading update sent shares tumbling as much as 35 per cent on Thursday. The biggest year for democracy, with half the global population heading to the polls, hasn’t ticked the right boxes for one of the best-known names in the opinion business. 

Political polling in fact makes only a tiny contribution to YouGov financially. Its bread and butter is providing businesses with insights into customer behaviour. The headline-grabbing political stuff is just a good way for YouGov to showcase what it does.

Line chart of Share price (pence) showing YouGov

The irony is that the uncertainty being whipped up by 2024’s endless elections helps explain belt tightening by YouGov’s clients. But the shock warning also raises questions about the success of its acquisition of GfK’s Consumer Panel Services business, which completed earlier this year.

Either way, adjusted operating profits will be between £41-44mn for the financial year that ends next month. That is about 30 per cent lower than consensus forecasts. If earnings expectations for next financial year hold up, then YouGov’s London-listed shares are the cheapest they have been in more than a decade, at about 10.5 times 2025 earnings.

YouGov’s drubbing owes more to the broader slowdown in consultancy services than politics. Spending on outside expertise is expected to flatline in 2024 after a boom that followed the pandemic, according to estimates by Source Global Research. The Big Four, as well as companies such as Accenture and McKinsey, have cut jobs in response to the squeeze.

YouGov’s woes mirror this trend. It points to a particular slowdown in “fast turnaround research”, the type of ad hoc projects or soul searching that businesses commission when the going is good.

Gathering accurate views is becoming increasingly difficult in a data hungry world where the public are becoming less willing to respond. And YouGov should be well placed: it has demonstrated the benefits of using analysis techniques such as “multilevel regression with poststratification”. That offers an edge in calling elections with greater accuracy and should have applications commercially.

YouGov says that the CPS deal, and its integration, is progressing well. But the size of this profit warning, so close to the July year end, will require more explanation.

Polling is meant to offer greater clarity on an uncertain future but everyone expects the odd nasty surprise on election day. When it comes to financial outcomes, shareholders are far less forgiving.

andrew.whiffin@ft.com


Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2024. All rights reserved.
Reuse this content (opens in new window) CommentsJump to comments section

Follow the topics in this article

Comments