New York, Feb 11, 2026, 16:59 ET — After-hours trading.
- Omnicom shares slipped roughly 5.1% in after-hours trading, trailing a broader market that was mostly unchanged.
- The company has locked in Feb. 18 for its fourth-quarter and full-year 2025 results, with a conference call following at 4:30 p.m. ET.
- Omnicom’s PR division is rolling brands together—another test for its post-merger cost control and execution chops.
Shares of Omnicom Group (OMC) dropped roughly 5% in after-hours Wednesday, deepening losses from earlier in the day. Investors are digesting fresh moves in agency consolidation and bracing for results coming up next week.
Timing’s key here. Omnicom, still busy integrating with Interpublic, heads into its next earnings call with something to prove: management needs to show how the merged operation actually performs, not just tout its new scale.
PR is a delicate business. Agencies come with baggage—decades of reputation, the weight of old client ties. Merging these shops trims redundancy, sure, but churn often follows.
The stock slipped 5.1% to $69.32, compared to Tuesday’s close. Shares bounced between $73.14 and $68.89 through the session, opening at $72.51. Volume came in around 6.5 million shares.
Omnicom plans to release its fourth-quarter and full-year 2025 numbers after the NYSE finishes trading on Feb. 18. The company’s set to hold an earnings call at 4:30 p.m. ET, and investors can find the webcast and presentation slides on its investor website. 1
Omnicom is moving to streamline its PR operations, according to Axios, merging Porter Novelli into FleishmanHillard and pairing up Ketchum with Golin. “No broad-based staffing changes are being announced today,” a company spokesperson told Axios. 2
Omnicom Public Relations boss Chris Foster, in an internal memo picked up by Exchange4media, spelled out the first-year priority: “no disruption to clients and faster access to the right expertise.” 3
Other big names in advertising and marketing slipped too, though losses weren’t as deep. WPP’s U.S. shares dropped roughly 4.6%, Stagwell shed around 2%. The S&P 500 ETF SPY, on the other hand, barely moved.
Industry observers see the consolidation as more evidence of a broader shakeup underway. On Tuesday, Richard Edelman called the Omnicom actions “further confirmation of the fundamental reshaping of the PR industry.” 4
The downside’s not hard to imagine: integration tends to weigh on margins well before any cost savings materialize. If clients start worrying about staff shakeups or gaps in coverage, smaller competitors might find a way in. And there’s always the risk—especially if budgets get pinched—that AI and insourcing could squeeze things further.
Feb. 18 is circled—Omnicom’s earnings and Q&A. What traders want: signs on 2026 demand, details on integration expenses, and clarity on management’s appetite for further consolidation.