Omnicom overtook WPP in the June North American media holding company rankings after nearly doubling its net new-business billings between May and June, according to Campaign Red's monthly analysis. The displacement marks the first time WPP has ceded the top position in this geography since late 2022.
The billings surge came from a concentration of mid-sized account wins across automotive and consumer electronics categories, not a single landmark pitch. Omnicom's monthly new-business total reached an estimated $247 million in June, compared to $134 million in May. WPP's June figure held at $211 million, down from $228 million the prior month. The gap is narrow—$36 million—but the direction is what holding-company boards and category leads watch.
This matters because North American media billings are the leading indicator for global reallocation cycles. When a holding company shifts position in this ranking, pitch invitations and RFP shortlists typically follow within two quarters. Family offices and luxury groups tied to legacy WPP relationships now face a decision tree: stay with scale, or follow momentum. The billings data also suggests Omnicom is converting pitches faster, a function of either pricing discipline or creative product that closes without extended deliberation.
The automotive and consumer electronics wins are worth isolating. Both categories saw 15-20% YoY increases in North American media spend through Q1, per Standard Media Index. Omnicom's ability to capture a disproportionate share of that growth—rather than waiting for annual reviews—signals either superior category expertise or better terms. For luxury hospitality groups planning fall media reviews, the implication is that Omnicom now carries competitive leverage it lacked in Q1.
Operators should track three items through Q3. First, whether Omnicom can hold this position for three consecutive months—the threshold at which clients begin treating rankings as durable rather than statistical noise. Second, whether WPP's response involves pricing concessions or talent moves; early signs of either typically surface in trade press by late August. Third, whether Publicis or Dentsu use this moment to accelerate their own North American pitch activity, attempting to gain share while the top two are repositioning.
The June data arrives as Omnicom prepares its Q2 earnings call in late July, where management will face questions about whether billings momentum translates to organic revenue growth or simply reflects front-loaded contract timing. WPP reports a week earlier, and guidance language around North American media will clarify whether leadership views this as a temporary reversal or the start of a longer correction.