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Ad industry expected to make a major COVID comeback

Data: GroupM; Chart: Will Chase/Axios

The advertising industry, plagued last year by pandemic-driven budget cuts, is poised to return stronger than ever in 2021 and beyond, according to several new forecasts.

Be smart: The quick turnaround means that the ad market is recovering faster than it did following the 2008 recession.


  • "In 2021, the American advertising industry is poised to regain all that it lost in 2020 and more," wrote GroupM's Brian Wieser in an analyst note last week.

Why it matters: In a recession, marketing budgets are typically the first expense cut from a company's budget. But because the government injected so much stimulus into the economy, initial fears of a prolonged consumer spending slump have subsided.

  • "Unlike the economic slowdowns of years past, the ratio of ad spending to U.S. GDP did not sharply inflect down, rather it moved up higher," media analyst Michael Nathanson wrote in a note to clients. Nathanson adds that his firm MoffettNathanson is "incredibly bullish about the years that follow. "

By the numbers:

  • In the U.S., GroupM forecasts that the the industry will grow by 15% this year, better than its prior 12% forecast. Wieser predicts that the U.S. "should end the year with 6% more activity than we saw in the last 'normal' year of 2019."
  • Globally, Magna — another advertising agency — also increased its forecasts, predicting the global ad market will increase by 6.4% to $240 billion this year — up from the 4.1% that was originally forecasted in December.

Between the lines: Beyond the general economic recovery, analysts are also optimistic that in-person activities, like sporting events, live entertainment and travel, will return faster-than-expected, driving marketing opportunities.

  • The summer Olympics, for example, is expected to drive $800m of incremental revenue this year, per Magna.
  • Magna expects that the strongest ad spend growth rates will come from the travel, automotive, beverages, and movies categories.

The big picture: The pandemic has expedited the migration from analog media to digital, and the same effect can be seen in the advertising market.

  • Digital advertising was resilient during the pandemic, thanks in large part to small businesses leaning into e-commerce, and favoring the likes of tech giants like Google, Amazon and Facebook.
  • Traditional publishers on the other hand, "barely stabilized digital ad sales," per Magna.

Yes, but: For certain industries — like the automotive sector — Wieser notes that recovery could be a bit slower, thanks to the reliance on foreign supply chains that are linked to countries that may not recover as quickly as the U.S.

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Louisiana governor says damage from Hurricane Ida is "catastrophic"

Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards said Monday the damage in the aftermath of Hurricane Ida, one of the strongest hurricanes to hit the state on record, "is really catastrophic."

Why it matters: Edwards, speaking on NBC's the TODAY Show, did not confirm if there were additional deaths beyond the first death that had been confirmed on Sunday night but said, "I fully expect the confirmed death total to go up considerably."

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NVIDIA tops highest paying internships list

In the past year as the pandemic raged on, some of the world's most valuable companies continued to grow and compensate their workers well above national medians – interns included.

Driving the news: Workplace review platform Glassdoor published its 2021 report todayon the 25 highest paying U.S. internships.

  • Tech companies once again dominated the list, taking up 16 spots.
  • Banks made the list six times and energy companies show up twice.

Why it matters: Internships offer companies a wide recruiting pool to fill full-time hiring pipelines — and in tech, the need for fresh talent is so acute that companies often have to outspend one another to be competitive.

Topping Glassdoor's list this year in median monthly pay:

  • NVIDIA, $8,811 ($105,732 yearly)
  • Facebook, $8,023
  • LinkedIn, $8,009
  • Amazon, $7,954
  • Salesforce, $7,710
  • Rounding out the top 10 are Capital One, Microsoft, Uber, Google, and ExxonMobil.

For context: Top internship pay growth is outpacing growth of national median income and earnings by a significant margin.

  • Median household incomes in the U.S. grew 6.8% to $68,703 in 2019, while median earnings for workers 15 and older grew 1.4% to $41,537.
  • The top median monthly pay for interns grew 10% from 2019. (Glassdoor publishes this list every other year, and Facebook topped the previous list at $8,000.)

Worthy of note: NVIDIA ranked second on Glassdoor's top paying companies in 2019.

  • Tesla shows up on this year's highest paying internship list at 24 with a median monthly pay of $5,348 and is flagged as going through a hiring surge right now.
  • The spread between the top spot on this year's list versus the 25th spot, occupied by Cisco Systems, is $3,463 or $41,552 on a yearly basis.
  • Many Big Tech internships went virtual last year amid the pandemic shutdowns.

Yes, but: While these numbers may be enviable, some 40% of internships at for-profit companies are unpaid because many employers still view summer internships as a "rite of passage."

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