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	<title>Muzak Corporation Archives - THIS IS ATV NETWORK from Transdiffusion</title>
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	<description>ATV: The Entertainment Network 1955-1981 &#124; ITV in the Midlands and London</description>
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	<title>Muzak Corporation Archives - THIS IS ATV NETWORK from Transdiffusion</title>
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	<item>
		<title>Report from Australia</title>
		<link>https://associatedtelevision.network/company/report-from-australia/</link>
					<comments>https://associatedtelevision.network/company/report-from-australia/#comments</comments>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[John Patience]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 05 Feb 2025 10:50:12 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Company]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[2CA]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[2GB]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[3AW]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[5DN]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[ATN Sydney]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[ATV Australia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Australia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Broadcasting Associates]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Macquarie Broadcasting Service]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Muzak Corporation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[New Zealand]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[NWS]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pye Records]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[QTC]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Whiplash]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://associatedtelevision.network/?p=2463</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>The story of two years of progress at ATV's Broadcasting Associates Pty Ltd</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://associatedtelevision.network/company/report-from-australia/">Report from Australia</a> appeared first on <a href="https://associatedtelevision.network">THIS IS ATV NETWORK from Transdiffusion</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<figure id="attachment_2355" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-2355" style="width: 300px" class="wp-caption alignright"><a href="https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/atv-newsheet-masthead.jpg"><img fetchpriority="high" decoding="async" src="https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/atv-newsheet-masthead-300x193.jpg" alt="ATV Newssheet masthead" width="300" height="193" class="size-medium wp-image-2355" srcset="https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/atv-newsheet-masthead-300x193.jpg 300w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/atv-newsheet-masthead-768x494.jpg 768w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/atv-newsheet-masthead-1024x658.jpg 1024w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/atv-newsheet-masthead-587x377.jpg 587w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/atv-newsheet-masthead-549x353.jpg 549w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/atv-newsheet-masthead.jpg 1170w" sizes="(max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px" /></a><figcaption id="caption-attachment-2355" class="wp-caption-text">From ATV Newsheet for March 1961</figcaption></figure>
<p>IT is just over two years since ATV became interested in the Australian scene by purchasing the commercial radio and television interests of the Daily Mirror group. ATV (Australia) Pty. Ltd. was then formed to be ATV’s Australian company.</p>
<p>The commercial radio interests acquired by ATV included shareholdings in Station 2GB Sydney and in Stations 3AW Melbourne and 5DN Adelaide, as well as in Station 2CA Canberra in the Australian Capital Territory and stations in the provincial cities of Wollongong, Young and Lithgow in the state of New South Wales.</p>
<p>In addition, ATV became a major partner in the Macquarie Broadcasting Service, the only Australia-wide network of commercial radio stations. It also took over a large investment in television station ATN Sydney.</p>
<h2>EXPANDED INTERESTS</h2>
<p>The Macquarie Network is made up of 22 member stations (including the ATV group) and 39 co-operating stations, on which Macquarie produced programmes are placed. These 61 stations of a total of 109 commercial stations cover 75% of the population.</p>
<p>In the past two years, our Australian interests have greatly expanded. We have acquired shareholdings in commercial television stations QTC Brisbane and NWS Adelaide and also in five provincial television stations which will operate in Canberra, Wollongong, Orange, Lismore and Ballarat.</p>
<p>Pye Records is established in business as our Australian record company and we are about to give the folk in Sydney and Melbourne the benefit of Muzak.</p>
<p>Last, but by no means least, ATV has produced “Whiplash”, the first major TV series made here for world-wide distribution.</p>
<p>Since the first TV transmissions just over four years ago this exciting medium has grown rapidly, so that today there are two commercial stations and one national station in Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane and Adelaide, and one commercial and one national station in Perth and Hobart.</p>
<p>Total sets licensed in these cities exceed 1,000,000, representing approximately 70% saturation in Sydney and Melbourne, and over 50% in the other four cities.</p>
<p>Within 12 to 18 months, a further 13 commercial stations and 13 national stations will open in country and provincial areas bringing over 70% of the total population within coverage of TV.</p>
<h2>GROWING MARKET</h2>
<p>In this rapidly growing market ATV (Aust.) has been very active selling and distributing your programmes. We now have 37 film and 12 telerecorded series on Australian screens totalling 2,130 half-hours of entertainment. Half of this is British material.</p>
<p><strong>Our Company is easily the biggest distributor of British product in a market where 88% of programme footage imported last year came from the United States and 10% from the United Kingdom.</strong></p>
<p><strong>Programmes currently keeping ATV in the public eye include: Deadline Midnight; Probation Officer, Emergency–Ward 10; The Larkins; Arthur Haynes; Saturday Spectaculars; Television Playhouse; Whiplash; Danger Man; Four Just Men; Interpol Calling; Robin Hood; Invisible Man and William Tell.</strong></p>
<p>This is a hungry market. Transmission hours are longer than in the United Kingdom and the commercial stations in Sydney and Melbourne are on the air for an average of 12 hours per day.</p>
<h2>NEW ZEALAND SALES</h2>
<p>ATV (Aust.) Pty. Ltd. is also selling and distributing programmes in the New Zealand market where transmissions started in Auckland some nine months ago. Coverage is expected to extend to Wellington, Christchurch a Dunedin shortly and we look forward to an increasing volume of sales in this new market.</p>
<p>So far, we have secured a large share of the present programmes scheduled in Auckland where some 500 half hours have been sold.</p>
<p>This then, is the overall picture of what is happening on the other side of the globe.</p>
<p>We are very proud of our association with all you good folk in England and we look forward to many years of co-operation with ATV in Britain.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://associatedtelevision.network/company/report-from-australia/">Report from Australia</a> appeared first on <a href="https://associatedtelevision.network">THIS IS ATV NETWORK from Transdiffusion</a>.</p>
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		<title>ATV financial results: 1969</title>
		<link>https://associatedtelevision.network/company/reports/atv-financial-results-1969/</link>
					<comments>https://associatedtelevision.network/company/reports/atv-financial-results-1969/#respond</comments>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Chairman&#039;s Statement]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 30 Aug 2023 09:50:54 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Financial reports]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ambassador Bowling]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Bentray Investments]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Bermans]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[British Relay Wireless & Television]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Canastel Broadcasting Corporation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Century 21 Enterprises]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Jack Gill]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Joe 90]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lew Grade]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Louis Benjamin]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Muzak Corporation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Northern Songs]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Planned Music]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pye Records]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Queen's Award]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Soho Record Shops]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[TV 21]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Welbeck Music]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://associatedtelevision.network/?p=2034</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>The Board of Directors on Associated Television Corporation's 1969 results</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://associatedtelevision.network/company/reports/atv-financial-results-1969/">ATV financial results: 1969</a> appeared first on <a href="https://associatedtelevision.network">THIS IS ATV NETWORK from Transdiffusion</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-68-77.png"><img decoding="async" src="https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-68-77.png" alt="Associated Television Corporation" width="1170" height="299" class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-1983" srcset="https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-68-77.png 1170w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-68-77-300x77.png 300w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-68-77-768x196.png 768w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-68-77-1024x262.png 1024w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-68-77-720x184.png 720w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-68-77-675x173.png 675w" sizes="(max-width: 1170px) 100vw, 1170px" /></a></p>
<p><a href="https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/eyeboxout-65-66-68-69.png"><img decoding="async" src="https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/eyeboxout-65-66-68-69-150x150.png" alt="ATV symbol" width="150" height="150" class="alignright size-thumbnail wp-image-2021" srcset="https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/eyeboxout-65-66-68-69-150x150.png 150w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/eyeboxout-65-66-68-69-300x300.png 300w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/eyeboxout-65-66-68-69-70x70.png 70w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/eyeboxout-65-66-68-69-377x377.png 377w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/eyeboxout-65-66-68-69-353x353.png 353w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/eyeboxout-65-66-68-69.png 500w" sizes="(max-width: 150px) 100vw, 150px" /></a></p>
<p><strong>The 14th Annual General Meeting of Associated Television Corporation Limited was held at ATV House. Great Cumberland Place. London, W.1. on 25th September, 1969 at 12 noon.</strong></p>
<p><strong>The following ore extracts from the Directors&#8217; Report for the year ended 30th March, 1969.</strong></p>
<p><strong>Sir Lew Grade.</strong> Your Board was truly delighted to learn on January 1st that Her Majesty hod bestowed the honour of a knighthood upon Sir Lew Grade for his services to export. This wos a magnificent recognition of the untiring efforts Sir Lew has mode on behalf of your Corporation in overseas markets.</p>
<p><strong>Queen&#8217;s Award.</strong> The Company&#8217;s 1968-69 year is memorable for another reason, for we were notified that your Company was to receive a second Queen&#8217;s Award to Industry for its export achievement.</p>
<h2>GROUP RESULTS</h2>
<p>The profit for the Group before levy and taxation is £11,042,000 <em>[£152.5m in today&#8217;s money allowing for inflation – Ed]</em> a decrease of £1,327,000 <em>[£18.3m]</em> from last year. After the payment of £5,431,000 <em>[£75m]</em> for Levy and £2,498,000 <em>[£34.5m]</em> in taxation, the Group profit is £3,113,000 <em>[£43m]</em>, which is £300,000 <em>[£4.1m]</em> less than last year. The Board has considered these results and has decided to recommend a final dividend of 12.9625%, making the total distribution for the year 28.4625% (same).</p>
<p>Shareholders&#8217; Funds are £24,238,000 <em>[£334.8m]</em>, compared with £23,812,000 <em>[£328.9m]</em> for 1968.</p>
<div id="results-boxout-right">
<h2 class="results-banner">Transdiffusion analysis</h2>
<p>Last year&#8217;s report faithfully parroted the line that the seven-day Midland contract was worth more than the 5-day Midland/2-day London one ATV had previously held. Certainly on paper, from the ITA&#8217;s analysis, that should have been true.</p>
<p>But moving ABC&#8217;s pushy sales staff from working their Birmingham and Manchester beat to become the sales department of new <a href="https://thames.today/" rel="noopener" target="_blank">London weekday contractor Thames</a> had upturned those calculations. The troubles at London Weekend Television hadn&#8217;t helped either: with audiences deserting the upmarket company, advertisers had followed and they had flocked to Thames. Success begets success and Thames was able to point to the surge in advertising as a reason to advertise on Thames, sucking ad spend away from ATV, Granada and Yorkshire as well.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, the Corporation continues to expand away from television interests by buying a share of the Lennon-McCartney song catalogue. Whilst The Beatles would officially split at the end of next year, that slice of Northern Songs would remain one of the most valuable parts of the Corporation, with radio play and album purchasing of the group&#8217;s music continuing until today. ATV Music appears to be the last part of the empire to keep the ATV name – long after even the Associated Television Corporation had dropped the name. Sony/ATV Music wouldn&#8217;t drop the ATV name until 2019, which is why it remained normal to see ATV credited in the end titles of movies and television programmes – including in the titles of <em>Neighbours</em>.</p>
</div>
<h2>BENEFITS OF DIVERSIFICATION</h2>
<p>It must be recognised that ATV Network&#8217;s seven-day licence in the Midlands will be less profitable than the two-day London and five-day Midlands licence which ATV previously held. Not only is the income from advertising inherently lower, but servicing of the capital required to provide the new Midlands studios complete with equipment for colour, rising costs, the heavy incidence of S.E.T. and, above all, the increased rote of the Turnover Levy combine to produce a situation which cannot be regarded as other than financially unsatisfactory.</p>
<p>It is because the margin of profits of the television operation is bound to be severely reduced that your Directors are pleased to be able to report the success of their policy of diversification. In the year under review the profits of ATV&#8217;s non-television subsidiaries already amount to no less than 51% of your Group&#8217;s total profits and, in the current year, the advantages to your Corporation of planned expansion outside the television network operation will become increasingly apparent.</p>
<h2>TELEVISION AND RELATED ACTIVITIES</h2>
<p><strong>New Midland Studios.</strong> We ore well pleased with the progress in completing our new television studios of Paradise Centre in Birmingham which will be available for transmissions from the target date next month. However, it will not be before the early part of 1970 that all parts of the Paradise Centre Television Studios will be fully operational.</p>
<p><strong>Programmes.</strong> The centre of ATV Network&#8217;s activities is in its programmes. In spite of the many difficulties of the post year, ATV has once again produced a wide range of programmes of all types. There hove been indications of o reduction in the total amount of viewing for television programmes. The largest proportion of the decline has fallen to BBC programming in spite of its control of two channels ond monopoly of free advertising for its television programmes on BBC rodio. In the last six months, ATV Network&#8217;s proportion of the total television audience has risen substantially, ond now stands at approximately 56%, with BBC 1 and BBC 2 combined having 44%.</p>
<h2>FILM PRODUCTION AND DISTRIBUTION</h2>
<p>During the course of the year, this division of the Group further extended the already wide ranqe of its activities.</p>
<p>ITC&#8217;s sales effort embraces every category of film ond television programmes — from documentaries ond religion on the one hand through the whole range of drama series to international variety, sport ond feature films.</p>
<p>It is unprecedented for any British company to have four major variety shows and four filmed series on the American networks in the same year.</p>
<h2>THEATRES</h2>
<p>The Stoll Theatre Corporation has had another successful year. Total admission receipts were slightly up although, due to rising costs and in particular the unfair burden of S.E.T., profits were marginally down.</p>
<h2>MERCHANDISING AND PUBLISHING</h2>
<p>Your merchandising and general publishing activities are now grouped together under Century 21 Enterprises. The merchandising division has been successful in obtaining exploitation rights for properties both inside ond outside the field of television. We hove been appointed exclusive licensees to handle a majority of CBS properties in the U.K. A new children&#8217;s comic titled &#8216;Joe 90&#8217; was successfully launched and &#8216;TV 21,&#8217; our other children&#8217;s weekly, celebrated its fourth anniversory.</p>
<h2>RECORDS AND MUSIC</h2>
<p><strong>Pye Records.</strong> During the year, we completed a re-equipment of our recording studios with the most modern equipment and we are now able to record in eight track. This technical improvement hos attracted a great deal of further business to our studios from other record companies and third parties.</p>
<p>New overseas licensing arrangements have been made in many overseas countries, including Japan, Denmark, India and Pakistan. We are also delighted to report that exports increased by 41% over the previous yeor.</p>
<p><strong>Soho Record Shops.</strong> During the year we completed negotiations to acquire the remaining 49% of the Alex Strickland chain of retail shops called Soho Record Shops.</p>
<p><strong>Other Developments.</strong> Negotiations hove been completed with General Recorded Tape Company of California to form a joint record company in the States and negotiations are progressing to form a joint company in the U.K. for the manufacture of recorded tapes, cartridges and cassettes. This is a development of major importance for our record ond music division.</p>
<p><strong>Music Publishing.</strong> In line with our policy of planned expansion in the music publishing field, on agreement was reached for the purchase of a 32.1% share in Northern Songs, additional to the 2.7% which ATV already owned. As part of the agreement, an offer was made for the purchase of the remaining shareholding in the company. This offer has now lapsed and your Board is keeping the position under review. Meanwhile, Mr. Jack Gill and Mr. Louis Benjamin have been elected to the Board of Northern Songs to represent your interests.</p>
<p>Welbeck Music continues to flourish. It has extended its agreements with the Music Corporation of America and has also formed two new music companies with M.C.A.</p>
<h2>PROPERTY AND INVESTMENT</h2>
<p>Bentray&#8217;s first major development, Paradise Centre in Birmingham has got off to a good start. The television studios will be fully complete in the Autumn, approximately twelve months after a start was made.</p>
<p>We are now embarking on the second stage, the building of car parks, restaurant and multi-purpose Hall/Theatre together with some offices ond a canteen for ATV Network. The foundations of the tower block are also being laid at the present time and we hope this great feature in Birmingham will be completed in 1972. Negotiations for an hotel are also well advanced.</p>
<p><strong>British Relay Wireless and Television Ltd.</strong> BRW, in which we have on important investment, continues to move steadily ahead. The Group is one of the largest rental and relay organisations in the U.K. and long-term prospects remain extremely bright.</p>
<p><strong>Canada.</strong> During the year a contract was mode with Western Broadcasting Company of Vancouver to sell our investment holding company in Canada — Canastel Broadcasting Corporation — at a price around $2½million <em>[C$20m]</em>. The necessary Government consents have been obtained and completion was effected at the end of July. This sale represents a profit on the original investment of approximately $1 million <em>[C$8m]</em>.</p>
<h2>OTHER ACTIVITIES</h2>
<p><strong>Ambassador Bowling.</strong> In spite of the very adverse conditions in the Bowling Industry which resulted in the closure of twenty bowling centres operated by competitors, your subsidiary company, Ambassador Bowling, has remained profitable.</p>
<p><strong>Planned Music.</strong> Soles of contracts for Muzak continue to improve and hove now reached a record level with a 20% rise on the preceding year.</p>
<p><strong>Bermans.</strong> The post year turned out to be outstandingly successful for Bermans. Its profits increased by 70% to a record level. The Company&#8217;s established position as a leading costumier to the theatrical industry outside the United States has been further strengthened.</p>
<h2>MANAGEMENT AND STAFF</h2>
<p>The past year has been a difficult one for the United Kingdom&#8217;s economy as a whole and this has produced many snags and problems for the managements of your Group of Companies. In particular the problems arising in Independent Television have been extreme. Your Boord wishes to express its gratitude to the management of all ATV&#8217;s companies and their staff for their efforts over the past year.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://associatedtelevision.network/company/reports/atv-financial-results-1969/">ATV financial results: 1969</a> appeared first on <a href="https://associatedtelevision.network">THIS IS ATV NETWORK from Transdiffusion</a>.</p>
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		<title>ATV financial results: 1968</title>
		<link>https://associatedtelevision.network/company/reports/atv-financial-results-1968/</link>
					<comments>https://associatedtelevision.network/company/reports/atv-financial-results-1968/#respond</comments>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Chairman&#039;s Statement]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 23 Aug 2023 09:52:16 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Financial reports]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ambassador Bowling]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[ATV Midlands]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Bentray Investments]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Bermans]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[British Columbia Television]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Canastel Broadcasting Corporation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Century 21 Productions]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[CJCH]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[colour]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Elstree]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Incorporated Television Company]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Independent Television Corporation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Jack Gill]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Joe 90]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Jubilee Music]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lew Grade]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Man in a Suitcase]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Muzak Corporation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[New World Music]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Paradise Centre]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Planned Music]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pye Records]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Robin Gill]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Royal Variety Performance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Show Time]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Spotlight]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Stoll Theatres]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Champions]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Last Shangri-La]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Prisoner]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Saint]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Secret Service]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://associatedtelevision.network/?p=2032</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>The Board of Directors on Associated Television Corporation's 1968 results</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://associatedtelevision.network/company/reports/atv-financial-results-1968/">ATV financial results: 1968</a> appeared first on <a href="https://associatedtelevision.network">THIS IS ATV NETWORK from Transdiffusion</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-68-77.png"><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" src="https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-68-77.png" alt="Associated Television Corporation" width="1170" height="299" class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-1983" srcset="https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-68-77.png 1170w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-68-77-300x77.png 300w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-68-77-768x196.png 768w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-68-77-1024x262.png 1024w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-68-77-720x184.png 720w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-68-77-675x173.png 675w" sizes="auto, (max-width: 1170px) 100vw, 1170px" /></a></p>
<p><a href="https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/eyeboxout-65-66-68-69.png"><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" src="https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/eyeboxout-65-66-68-69-150x150.png" alt="ATV symbol" width="150" height="150" class="alignright size-thumbnail wp-image-2021" srcset="https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/eyeboxout-65-66-68-69-150x150.png 150w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/eyeboxout-65-66-68-69-300x300.png 300w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/eyeboxout-65-66-68-69-70x70.png 70w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/eyeboxout-65-66-68-69-377x377.png 377w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/eyeboxout-65-66-68-69-353x353.png 353w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/eyeboxout-65-66-68-69.png 500w" sizes="auto, (max-width: 150px) 100vw, 150px" /></a></p>
<p><em><strong>The 13th Annual General Meeting of Associated Television Corporation Limited was held at ATV House, Great Cumberland Place, London, W.1, on 26th September, 1968 at 12 noon.</strong></em></p>
<p><em><strong>The following are extracts from the Chairman&#8217;s Statement read at the meeting.</strong></em></p>
<p>Since the year end we have been able to announce a further multi-million dollar U.S. deal for a new Millicent Martin television film series.</p>
<p>ATV Corporation is already one of the world&#8217;s greatest producers of filmed television series for international distribution. Current production costs run at some £7 million <em>[£101.8m in today&#8217;s money allowing for inflation – Ed]</em> a year and by 1970, when we will also be among the world&#8217;s greatest producers of feature films for international distribution, ATV&#8217;s annual expenditure will have been approximately doubled. Very large revenues indeed will by then be flowing in from overseas and these, of course, are in no way subject to the Turnover Levy which falls so heavily upon ATV Network.</p>
<p>A recent issue of The Financial Times quoted a table showing the major U.K. companies in order of merit judged by their net profit as a percentage of capital invested. We were delighted to see that ATV came fifteenth out of all British Industry. This is a very high tribute to your management team led by Mr Lew Grade our Chief Executive, Mr. Robin Gill our Managing Director and Mr. Jack Gill our Finance Director.</p>
<p>The financing of Paradise Centre and the Group&#8217;s general needs are being looked at with our advisers, so that we have the appropriate cash available for our planned expansion.</p>
<p><em><strong>The following are extracts from the Directors Report for the year ended 31st March, 1968.</strong></em></p>
<h2>GROUP RESULTS</h2>
<p>The profit for the Group, before Levy and taxation, is £12,369,000 <em>[£179.8m]</em>, an increase of £530,000 <em>[£7.7m]</em> over the results of last year.</p>
<p>This improvement is more than offset, however, by the increased amount of Levy (£6,186,000 <em>[£89.9m]</em> this year as against £5,761,000 <em>[£83.8m]</em> last year) in respect of your Company&#8217;s ATV Network operation, and the increased amount of taxation (£2,770,000 <em>[£40.3m]</em> as against £2,348,000 <em>[£34.1m]</em> last year) for the Group as a whole. Levy and taxation together reduce the Group&#8217;s profit to £3,413,000 <em>[£49.6m]</em> which is £317,000 <em>[£4.6m]</em> less than last year.</p>
<p>In the light of these trading results, your Board nevertheless feels fully justified in recommending on increase in the rate of dividend for the year. The final dividend of 15.9625% will bring the total for the year to 28.4625% (as against 27.5% lost year). This represents the maximum increase permitted by the Treasury.</p>
<p>Shareholders&#8217; funds are £23,812,000 <em>[£346.2m]</em>, as against £22,708,000 <em>[£330.1m]</em> for 1967.</p>
<h2>DIVERSIFICATION</h2>
<p>The proportion of Group Profits attributable to Subsidiaries has, during the year, risen to 45% as against 42% in the previous year and 30% for the year 1965/66. Inspection of the Group&#8217;s Financial Statistics will, indeed, reveal that progress in the Group&#8217;s trading activities outside the TV operation has been both rapid and consistent, viz., the conversion of a net loss situation of £303,000 <em>[£4.4m]</em> in 1962 into a profit figure of £2,749,000 <em>[£40m]</em> in this year&#8217;s Accounts.</p>
<p>The value of Group Export sales for the year totalled £5,650,000 <em>[£82.1m]</em>.</p>
<div id="results-boxout-right">
<h2 class="results-banner">Transdiffusion analysis</h2>
<p>ATV had long concentrated investment on its Elstree studios, equipping them ready for 625-line colour and the coming of their seven-day London UHF contract. With London off the menu – not just the ITV-2 part but also their existing London weekend service – attention would now have to be paid to Birmingham.</p>
<p>The <a href="http://alphatelevision.services/" rel="noopener" target="_blank">existing studios for the region were out at Aston</a> Cross, in a converted ABC cinema, and were jointly operated by ABC and ATV. With ABC off to London to become the driving force behind Thames, that left ATV paying for a building without sharing costs. The studios were also old, cramped by comparison with the new ones going up in Leeds and on the Euston Road in London, and need refitting for colour. Why pay for the installation of new lighting rigs and wiring and all the other things needed for colour and 625 in a building in the middle of nowhere when city centre studios are all the rage?</p>
<p>It would be better to build new and, ATV being ATV, why not turn this into an opportunity for expansion?</p>
<p>The company had paid off the mortgage on Elstree early, and owned ATV House on Great Cumberland Street outright as well. There were also patches of land – in Vauxhall, for instance – bought up in case of future need or just as something to do with all the cash on hand. This was a very good start for a property development subsidiary.</p>
<p>Bentray Investments is what Robert Holmes a&#8217;Court really wanted when he bought the Corporation in 1982. By that time it was sat on a huge property portfolio and there was an evident office and leisure building boom coming in that decade. But here we are at the start of things, and Bentray has one job to do to prove itself: take a parcel of awkwardly shaped and placed land in the middle of Birmingham and build a modern 625-line colour studio and administration centre. And make it profitable outside of just charging fellow-subsidiary ATV Network rent.</p>
<p>Birmingham, which has been knocked down and rebuilt several times over the last 150 years for various reasons and to various designs from &#8216;okay&#8217; to &#8216;urban nightmare&#8217;, was being rebuilt again, this time in fashionable concrete. There was basically a blank slate for Bentray – the city council would accept almost anything modern that wasn&#8217;t an area of wasteland and part-demolished cinema any more. The studios, a multi-storey car park (Birmingham: motorway city of the 70s!) and a shiny tall hotel and conference centre would be very welcome indeed.</p>
<p>The resulting site was very nice indeed. Late, but then all construction projects are late. A bit sterile, but it&#8217;s concrete and glass. And, ATV being ATV, the &#8216;Paradise Centre&#8217; name soon fell away: this was to be the &#8216;ATV Centre&#8217;.</p>
</div>
<h2>TELEVISION AND RELATED ACTIVITIES</h2>
<p><strong>New ITA Contract.</strong> ATV Network Limited was awarded the Independent Television Authority&#8217;s Contract for the Midlands Area for six years, commencing 30th July, 1968. This is the major Contract under the current allocation of the Independent Television Authority.</p>
<p><strong>New Midlands Studios.</strong> By the end of 1969, the Television Studio portion of the new &#8216;Paradise Centre&#8217; in Birmingham will be complete. These studios will be fully equipped for the start of Independent Television&#8217;s Colour transmissions at the end of 1969, and will be the most modem in the world. Every advantage will be token of the latest technological developments In the television field, and of our years of experience with colour programming at Elstree.</p>
<h2>PROGRAMMES FOR ALL SEASONS</h2>
<p>During the year your Company mode more than 1,000 contributions to the Network, and fully maintained its leading position among the Independent Television programme makers.</p>
<p>One programme, the Royal Variety Performance, established a new record. Designed as a charity show in aid of the Variety Artistes&#8217; Benevolent Fund, and given in the presence of Her Majesty The Queen and His Royal Highness The Duke of Edinburgh, this production was seen in 11½ million homes, representing some 40 million viewers.</p>
<p>&#8216;Spotlight,&#8217; a production for CBS of America, and &#8216;Show Time,&#8217; seen on the same trans-Atlantic network, were both among the Colour programmes produced in ATV studios. Indeed, in the whole matter of Colour, ATV has been to the forefront. Even while home-viewers could see ATV programmes only in black-and-white, the Documentary department has been producing in full Colour. One programme in particular, &#8216;The Last Shangri-La,&#8217; has been internationally acclaimed for the beauty of its photography.</p>
<h2>FILM PRODUCTION AND DISTRIBUTION</h2>
<p><strong>ITC—Incorporated Television Company.</strong> It is this company which is responsible for all ATV&#8217;s film productions, and for distribution of films and television programmes in the Eastern hemisphere.</p>
<p>The current production schedule is an unusually full one. No fewer than four series are currently being filmed. Sales, moreover, are fully abreast of production.</p>
<p><strong>Independent Television Corporation.</strong> This company, which acts as distributor of ATV films and television programmes throughout the Western hemisphere, has enjoyed an outstanding 12 months&#8217; trading. The current year promises to be equally rewarding. ATV Series &#8216;Man in a Suitcase,&#8217; &#8216;The Saint,&#8217; &#8216;The Prisoner,&#8217; &#8216;Show Time,&#8217; and &#8216;The Champions&#8217; hove all been shown on the U.S. Networks.</p>
<p><strong>Century 21 Productions.</strong> The puppet films made by Century 21 Productions are world-famous in television and cinema alike. A new TV series, &#8216;Joe 90,&#8217; is now ready; &#8216;The Secret Service,&#8217; a revolutionary piece of production in which a live actor doubles with his puppet counterpart, is already on the studio floor.</p>
<h2>THEATRES</h2>
<p><strong>Stoll Theatres Corporation.</strong> This Group has enjoyed a record year. It is particularly pleasing to announce that your theatre, the London Coliseum, has now become the new Opera House for Sadler&#8217;s Wells.</p>
<h2>RECORDS AND MUSIC</h2>
<p><strong>Pye Records.</strong> Pye Records had a conspicuously successful year with profits again reaching a new record level. In 48 weeks out of 52, it has appeared among the Top Twenty despite the increased efforts of American competitors.</p>
<p><strong>Music Publishing.</strong> Our existing companies, Welbeck Music, New World Music and Jubilee Music, continue to produce excellent results, and active steps are being taken to enlarge the scope of our music publishing interests.</p>
<h2>PROPERTY AND INVESTMENT</h2>
<p><strong>Properties.</strong> All the various property assets of the Group are being concentrated within our subsidiary company Bentray Investments Limited.</p>
<p>These properties make an exciting portfolio with every indication of steady income growth over the years. There ore also large-scale development possibilities in the long-term in connection with certain of them though, for the time being, there are Government restrictions on office development and building in city centres.</p>
<p>The first major development of Bentray will take place in Birmingham. This, the &#8216;Paradise Centre&#8217; site adjacent to the Town Hall in the heart of the city, will ultimately comprise a 6-acre development which is unique in character, and the final cost could exceed £15 million <em>[£218m]</em>.</p>
<p><strong>Canada.</strong> Our investments in British Columbia Television and CJCH Halifax are held by our wholly owned subsidiary, Canastel Broodcasting Corporation.</p>
<p>British Columbia Television has commenced to pay dividends and the company has achieved excellent growth during the lost two or three years. In the cose of CJCH the progress is slower and the market a more difficult one. However, in our opinion the value of our investment is well protected.</p>
<h2>OTHER ACTIVITIES</h2>
<p><strong>Ambassador Bowling.</strong> This company has continued to be profitable. Indeed, the general recession in the industry which has led to the closure of a number of competing bowling centres has proved a direct benefit to Ambassador Bowling.</p>
<p><strong>Planned Music Group.</strong> Substantial progress was mode during the past year. It is calculated that approximately 3½ million people in the United Kingdom listen to Muzak every week, and this number is growing steadily. Worth-while contracts for the supply of equipment hove been obtained from Germany, Denmark, Switzerland, Norway and Israel.</p>
<p><strong>Bermans.</strong> This company has hod the most successful year in its history. On the continent, Bermans is now recognised as the major film and theatrical costumiers of Europe.</p>
<h2>MANAGEMENT AND STAFF</h2>
<p>The Board wishes to express its most sincere thanks to those members of ATV&#8217;s staff at all levels who have so conscientiously served the Corporation during the past year.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://associatedtelevision.network/company/reports/atv-financial-results-1968/">ATV financial results: 1968</a> appeared first on <a href="https://associatedtelevision.network">THIS IS ATV NETWORK from Transdiffusion</a>.</p>
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		<title>ATV financial results: 1967</title>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Chairman&#039;s Statement]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 23 Aug 2023 09:51:05 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Financial reports]]></category>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p>Lord Renwick on Associated Television Limited's 1967 results</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://associatedtelevision.network/company/reports/atv-financial-results-1967/">ATV financial results: 1967</a> appeared first on <a href="https://associatedtelevision.network">THIS IS ATV NETWORK from Transdiffusion</a>.</p>
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										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-57to67.png"><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" src="https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-57to67.png" alt="Associated Television Limited" width="1170" height="299" class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-1982" srcset="https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-57to67.png 1170w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-57to67-300x77.png 300w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-57to67-768x196.png 768w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-57to67-1024x262.png 1024w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-57to67-720x184.png 720w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-57to67-675x173.png 675w" sizes="auto, (max-width: 1170px) 100vw, 1170px" /></a></p>
<blockquote><p>&#8220;POLICY OF PLANNED EXPANSION WILL BE VIGOROUSLY PURSUED&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<div style="border:3px solid black;margin:20px;padding:20px;">
<p>The 12th Annual General Meeting will be held at ATV House, Great Cumberland Piece, London, W.1., on 28th September, 1967 at 12 noon.</p>
<p>Extracts from the circulated statement by the Chairman, Lord Renwick, K.B.E., appear this page.</p>
</div>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><a href="https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-robertrenwick.jpg"><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" src="https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-robertrenwick-300x335.jpg" alt="Robert Renwick" width="300" height="335" class="alignright size-medium wp-image-1987" srcset="https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-robertrenwick-300x335.jpg 300w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-robertrenwick-768x859.jpg 768w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-robertrenwick-337x377.jpg 337w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-robertrenwick-316x353.jpg 316w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-robertrenwick.jpg 788w" sizes="auto, (max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px" /></a></p>
<p>Before I comment on the year&#8217;s results — which, for the fourth successive occasion, I must describe as truly excellent — let me refer to four important events in your Company&#8217;s history.</p>
<p>(i)&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; ATV Network Ltd., your wholly-owned subsidiary, has been awarded the seven-day-a-week Contract for the Midlands from 30th July, 1968, for a period of six years. This is the major Contract offered by the Independent Television Authority.</p>
<p>(ii)&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Associated Television, the first television, film and programme producing Group to be recognized in this way, has been honoured by being chosen as a recipient of the Queen&#8217;s Award to Industry for Export achievement in 1967.</p>
<p>(iii)&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; The range of your Company&#8217;s operations is now so extensive that your Board has felt for some time that a new title would be more proper Accordingly, it is being proposed that Associated Television Ltd., the parent Company of the Group, should be renamed Associated Television Corporation Ltd.</p>
<p>(iv)&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Mr. Lew Grade has been appointed a Deputy Chairman and Chief Executive of your Company, and Mr. Robin Gill has been appointed Managing Director.</p>
<h2>GROUP RESULTS</h2>
<p>The consolidated Profit and Loss Account shows a profit for the Group, before Levy and taxation, of £11,838,787 <em>[£179.3m in today&#8217;s money, allowing for inflation – Ed]</em>, an increase of £779,476 <em>[£11.8m]</em> over the results of the previous year (£11,059,311 <em>[£167.5m]</em>).</p>
<p>The Levy on Television Advertising Revenue amounts to £5,761,068 <em>[£87.2m]</em> and is £328,702 <em>[£5m]</em> higher than last year. After deducting this levy, the profit before taxation amounts to £6,077,719 <em>[£92m]</em> (last year £5,626,945 <em>[£85.2m]</em>).</p>
<p>Taxation for the year is £2,348,188 <em>[£35.6m]</em> as against the previous year&#8217;s figure of £2,780,325 <em>[£42.1m]</em>. After adding back £528,697 <em>[£8m]</em> in respect of a provision for depreciation no longer required, the Group profit after deducting the Levy and taxation amounts to £4,258,228 <em>[£64.5m]</em> as compared with £2,846,620 <em>[£43.1m]</em> last year.</p>
<p>The Shareholders&#8217; funds, at £22,708,000 <em>[£344m]</em>, are more than £5,000,000 <em>[£75.7m]</em> greater than at the end of the previous year. The total increase since 1963 now amounts to £12,589,000 <em>[£190.7m]</em>.</p>
<p><strong>ATV GROWTH FACTOR.</strong> In an article, entitled &#8220;British Business Growth League,&#8221; published in the June, 1967, issue of &#8220;Management Today,&#8221; ATV was shown as the top company in the country for percentage increase in pre-tax profit for the period 1957-66.</p>
<p>In the same article, ATV was included in the list of Top Ten companies for percentage increase both in net capital employed and gross cash flow for the same period.</p>
<p><strong>FUTURE PROSPECTS.</strong> I must refer to the disturbing economic conditions which prevail, but in your Company&#8217;s affairs, two major factors, both highly encouraging, now colour the whole situation.</p>
<p>In the first place, the matter of the ATV Network Licence is satisfactorily settled, and your subsidiary&#8217;s profitable working into the mid-1970s can realistically be predicted.</p>
<p>Secondly, in the year under review, the non-licence operations within your Group contributed some 42% to the Company&#8217;s overall profits; and the high level of these non-licence earnings should be at least maintained.</p>
<p>I am able, therefore, to inform shareholders that I find both sides of your Company&#8217;s activities in good order, and can assure them that our announced policy of Planned Expansion will be vigorously pursued.</p>
<div id="results-boxout-right">
<h2 class="results-banner">Transdiffusion analysis</h2>
<p>ATV had been told it was on a hiding to nothing on its long-cherished plans for seven days in London a couple of years before. Then it was told that there was no chance of it even keeping a toe-hold in London: it would not be getting the expanded London weekend contract that would have Friday evenings added to it. That, unless something absolutely startling happened, would be going to ABC.</p>
<p>But the newly redivided central areas of ITV would not be the roughly even thirds of the 1955-68 four companies in three regions system. There was no way to do that with five companies in four regions.</p>
<p>Of the new contact areas, the Midlands was the plum. It would have the biggest population and viewership over 7 days. The previous top contract, London weekdays, would be second as it had lost the profitable Friday evening whilst retaining the loss-making public service stuff during the day. Only if slow and gentlemanly Rediffusion was replaced by something more dynamic in the advertising sales department would this not be so.</p>
<p>And ATV could keep making its variety shows in London for weekend nights, as the London weekend company would still want them and there was no chance of the new contractor deciding to junk the popular stuff and choosing to compete with BBC-2, of all things, by running opera and arts programmes and impenetrable drama on Saturday and Sunday nights.</p>
<p>So this was not bad news for ATV, and anyway, in a shareholders&#8217; report like this, even unwelcome news needs to be talked up.</p>
</div>
<h2>ATV NETWORK</h2>
<p><strong>THE NEW MIDLAND CONTRACT.</strong> I have already referred to the new seven-day-a-week Contract for the Midlands (10.4 million population) which the Authority has awarded to your Company.</p>
<p>This is the Contract for which your Company applied. It enables us to enlarge our long-standing interest in the Midlands, and also to maintain the greatest possible output of programmes for the national network.</p>
<p>From the outset of Independent Television, ATV has urged undivided weekly working as preferable in every way to the weekday/week-end split; and your Company is delighted that it will now be able to provide the unified and unbroken seven-day-a-week service which the Midland viewer deserves.</p>
<p>Shareholders will appreciate that the previous short Licence period of three years, the extension of one year, and uncertainties as to the future shape of Independent Television, rendered long term planning impossible. For the first time, your Company con see a clear course ahead of it, and a new studio complex will be erected. Plans for this were commissioned over three years ago. The studios will be the most up-to-date in the country and will be built with all the requirements of Colour in mind.</p>
<p>Now that the Authority has clarified the whole position, and ATV Network con concentrate its interest on the Midlands viewer, the Board of ATV Network will be strengthened by the addition of leading Midlands figures, and resident Executive Directors from within the Company.</p>
<p>I am very happy indeed that it should be Mr. Bill Ward, for so long one of the key men in ATV who becomes an Executive Director of ATV Network. Mr. Leonard Mathews, who, as Midlands Controller, has played such an important role for the Company, has also been appointed to the Board.</p>
<p><strong>THE MIDLANDS.</strong> Both local and nationally networked programmes hove shown a notable increase during the past year.</p>
<p>The daily serial, &#8220;Crossroads,&#8221; continues to enjoy top programme ratings, and the televising of the 500th episode in 1966 was celebrated by a dinner in Birmingham attended by viewers drawn from all parts of the United Kingdom.</p>
<p>ATV&#8217;s weekday network programme for children, &#8220;Tingha and Tucker Club&#8221; — the most popular in British television — has been joined by a Sunday network programme, &#8220;Tree House Family,&#8221; which is now seen in over 4 million homes.</p>
<p>The new regular weekly programme, &#8220;Midland Member,&#8221; enables a Member of Parliament from one of the 107 constituencies in the area to give a first-hand account of the work at Westminster; this is now recognised os providing one of the most important political contributions to Midlands life.</p>
<p>The magazine programme, &#8220;ATV Today,&#8221; continues to attract an audience of well over three million viewers; and, during the year ATV&#8217;s film unit covered more than 70,000 miles in collecting items for &#8220;Midland News.&#8221; No fewer than 66 Midland news stories provided by ATV appeared in the national news service of ITN.</p>
<p>In co-operation with the Midlands Police Forces, ATV has presented 52 episodes of the weekly &#8220;Police Five&#8221; programme. Over 250 crimes have been reported, and the police regard the information provided by television viewers as responsible, in at least ten per cent of the cases, for the successful outcome of police enquiries.</p>
<p>For the fifth successive year, ATV&#8217;s presentation of the Royal Show from the National Agricultural Centre, Kenilworth, received nation-wide coveroge.</p>
<p><strong>VIEWING HOURS.</strong> ATV shareholders and the viewing public at large should be aware of the fact that your Company, in common with all other Independent Television companies, is denied the right to provide the full and comprehensive service which it is naturally anxious to present. Hours of transmission ore rigidly restricted by order of the Postmaster General, and protests from the Company have proved unavailing. The Authority has listened sympathetically, and is fully aware of the extra programmes which your Company is seeking to provide. Your Company has all the facilities for the immediate provision of the extra hours. Nevertheless, the ban remains, in spite of the fact that the BBC with its two services now provides some thirty more hours of broadcasting each week than is permitted to Independent Television.</p>
<p><strong>COLOUR.</strong> In my last Report I stressed the fact that the ATV Network studios at Elstree would, by the autumn of 1966, be fully equipped for Colour operations in the various international line standards. This has been accomplished, and major drama productions electronically recorded in Colour now include three plays, namely &#8220;Ivanov&#8221; with Sir John Gielgud; &#8220;The Tormentors&#8221; starring James Mason and Stanley Baker; and &#8220;Present Laughter&#8221; with Peter O&#8217;Toole and Honor Blackman.</p>
<p>Light entertainment productions in Colour include the two-hour programme, &#8220;The Heart of Show Business,&#8221; in aid of the Aberfan victims; a series of 13 one-hour productions, &#8220;Piccadilly Palace,&#8221; with Morecambe and Wise, and Millicent Martin; and a series of 26 one-hour programmes, &#8220;Spotlight,&#8221; with British, American, and other international star artists.</p>
<p>All these productions are additional to the Colour programmes on film, to which I have referred earlier, and to mony documentary programmes made in Colour. Taken together, they constitute the largest library of TV Colour productions in Great Britain.</p>
<p>I am delighted that one of our news film teams, Mr. Gary Hughes and Mr. Noel Smart, should have won the Bronze Medal in the &#8220;hard news&#8221; section of the 1966 British Television News Film awards. This is the second year running in which ATV network has won on award.</p>
<p><strong>ALPHA STUDIOS, ASTON.</strong> ATV Midland transmissions are co-ordinated through the Presentation Centre of Aston, either for networking or for routing to the Authority&#8217;s transmitters at Lichfield and Membury.</p>
<p>The Alpha Studios accommodate nearly one hundred hours of rehearsals, recordings and transmissions each week.</p>
<p><strong>SALES.</strong> During a year in which there was a standstill in television advertising rates under the tight economic conditions of the &#8220;Squeeze,&#8221; the Sales Department of ATV Network nonetheless achieved an increase in net revenue of some 4½%. This growth was accomplished in a year when total national advertising appropriations fell for the first time since 1946.</p>
<p>ATV Network has developed <a href="https://sunspots.transdiffusion.uk/" rel="noopener" target="_blank">the whole scope of television advertising</a>. Holiday Tours, Fashion, and the Big Stores ore all now represented on the London screen; and, in the Midlands, the service has been extended to small businesses, retail shops and garages. Local advertisements now amount to some 1,500 a year. Moreover, industry throughout the Midlands responded warmly to the introduction by ATV Network of a Staff Recruitment Bureau, and viewers have been informed of over 500 vacancies, ranging from drivers and clerks to management accountants and project engineers.</p>
<p>ATV&#8217;s &#8220;Midlands Merchandiser,&#8221; a trade paper for grocers, now reaches more than 8,000 shops, and provides the only service in the industry which forms a direct link between television and the retailer.</p>
<p><strong>&#8220;TV WORLD.&#8221;</strong> The programme journal for the Midlands is owned jointly by ATV Network and ABC Television, and is published by Odhams Press.</p>
<p>From the outset, this magazine set up new publishing records. The circulation has risen steadily from 640,000 when the magazine first appeared in September, 1964, to the figure of over 737,000 at which it stands today. A long and prosperous future had, therefore, confidently been foreseen. Under a new ruling by the Authority, however, separate programme publications will cease after July, 1968, and a national weekly, with regional editions, published on behalf of all companies will supersede them.</p>
<p>I must, on behalf of viewers in the Midlands, enter a plea that the distinctive character and individuality of &#8220;TV WORLD&#8221; should be preserved intact in the new publication.</p>
<h2>EXPORTS</h2>
<p><a href="https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/eyeboxout-67.png"><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" src="https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/eyeboxout-67-300x150.png" alt="Queen&#039;s Award and ATV symbol" width="300" height="150" class="alignright size-medium wp-image-2030" srcset="https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/eyeboxout-67-300x150.png 300w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/eyeboxout-67-768x384.png 768w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/eyeboxout-67-720x360.png 720w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/eyeboxout-67-675x338.png 675w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/eyeboxout-67.png 1000w" sizes="auto, (max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px" /></a></p>
<p><strong>QUEEN&#8217;S AWARD FOR EXPORT ACHIEVEMENT.</strong> &#8220;Her Majesty The Queen has been graciously pleased to confer Her Award in 1967 upon Associated Television Ltd., London, W.1, for export achievement&#8221; — I quote the wording of the official citation which gave the world of British entertainment its first Queen&#8217;s Award to Industry.</p>
<p>The formal presentation of the Award was made by Major-General Sir George Burns, Lord Lieutenant of the County of Hertfordshire. The ceremony, which the Postmaster-General and members of the Independent Television Authority attended, took place on 4th July in your Company&#8217;s Elstree Studios.</p>
<p>I will not attempt to conceal my feelings of pride when I first read the Royal message. Nor will I conceal the fact that I regard it, in unique degree, as public recognition of the untiring work and devotion over the years of one man, your joint Deputy Chairman and Chief Executive, Mr. Lew Grade.</p>
<p>Shareholders should know that the establishment of a television export market for films has been a long, arduous and, at the outset, a heart-breakingly frustrating business. One by one, Mr. Grade has overcome the objections raised by foreign buyers when offered British products; and it is not too much to say that, through his efforts, your subsidiary, Incorporated Television Company, is now one of the most sought-after production sources in the world.</p>
<p>Knowing the strains that are involved in the many and complex transactions I am glad to think that, on his visits abroad, Mr. Grade should have your Managing Director, Mr. Robin Gill, there beside him. Together I believe, they represent the world&#8217;s strongest partnership in television film production and international distribution.</p>
<p><strong>ATV EXPORTS TODAY.</strong> The turnover figure for your Company&#8217;s export of television programmes continues to rise steadily. U.S. dollar sales have passed the $10,000,000 <em>[$91.1m]</em> mark and sales in the European Hemisphere have correspondingly increased. There is every indication that this present trend will not only be maintained, but will be improved upon.</p>
<p><strong>INDEPENDENT TELEVISION CORPORATION.</strong> This year your Company will have no fewer than five Colour television series on the American networks. This is the highest number in the history of the Company. In addition, a number of individual plays and documentaries have been sold to the American networks.</p>
<p>These results in the United States could not have been achieved without your Company&#8217;s American subsidiary, Independent Television Corporation.</p>
<p><strong>INCORPORATED TELEVISION COMPANY.</strong> Nor could these export results have been obtained had it not been for the magnificent work of your production group, Incorporated Television Company. The schedule of work in hand has never been so extensive as at the present moment, and the following series, all in Colour, are currently reaching completion: &#8220;Man in a Suitcase&#8221;; &#8220;The Prisoner&#8221;; &#8220;The Saint&#8221;; &#8220;Spotlight&#8221;; &#8220;Piccadilly Palace&#8221;; &#8220;The Champions.&#8221;</p>
<p>The wealth of British talent among producers, directors, script writers and actors available to I T C has led to a deal with United Artists for three feature films starring Roger Moore. Further feature film productions are in negotiation. All of these are for distribution to cinemas throughout the world.</p>
<p>In addition to its production activities, Incorporated Television Company is responsible for Eastern Hemisphere television sales where the year produced record results. Your company&#8217;s programmes are now being shown in 62 countries on this side of the Atlantic alone.</p>
<h2>THEATRES</h2>
<p><strong>STOLL THEATRES CORPORATION.</strong> I am happy to be able to report that this Group, under the chairmanship of Mr. Prince Littler, has enjoyed another successful year.</p>
<p>The current production, &#8220;Fiddler On The Roof&#8221; at Her Majesty&#8217;s Theatre has proved a triumph, and &#8220;There&#8217;s A Girl In My Soup&#8221; at the Globe Theatre has established itself as one of the outstanding attractions of the West End stage. Earlier in the year the centre of theatrical London was to be found at the Queen&#8217;s Theatre, which housed Noel Coward&#8217;s &#8220;Suite In Three Keys,&#8221; and the National Theatre Season.</p>
<p>The London Palladium pantomime, &#8220;Cinderella,&#8221; again broke all records, and &#8220;The Black &#038; White Minstrel Show&#8221; at the Victoria Palace continues undiminished into its sixth year.</p>
<p>The satisfactory results of the Stoll Theatres Corporation have been achieved despite the dual burdens of Selective Employment Tax and rising costs. Elsewhere in the West End, however, and among the provincial theatres the effects of rising costs and S.E.T. have been most damaging.</p>
<h2>PROPERTIES — CENTURY 21 — PYE RECORDS — MUSIC PUBLISHING &#8211; MUZAK — BOWLING</h2>
<p><strong>PROPERTIES.</strong> During the year we have brought our many property interests together within Bentray Investments. We now have a steady programme of improvement and expansion planned for the years ahead.</p>
<p><strong>CENTURY 21.</strong> On both sides of the Atlantic it is acknowledged that the &#8220;Thunderbirds&#8221; series of Gerry and Sylvia Anderson established entirely new levels in film-making ingenuity. Equally remarkable technical advances have now been achieved with a new range of puppets which will be seen for the first time in &#8220;Captain Scarlet,&#8221; a series of 32 half-hour episodes currently in production in Colour.</p>
<p>CENTURY 21 MERCHANDISING LTD. — PUBLISHING LTD. — TOYS LTD. The business of these three companies is the exploitation of subsidiary rights in television and motion picture properties.</p>
<p>In conjunction with City Magazines Ltd., a subsidiary of the &#8220;News of the World,&#8221; four children&#8217;s weeklies are now being produced and &#8220;TV Century 21&#8221; and &#8220;Lady Penelope&#8221; in particular enjoy outstanding success.</p>
<p><strong>PYE RECORDS.</strong> The year&#8217;s trading has been highly satisfactory. Among Pye Records successes are the First and Second Prize winners in the Eurovision Song Contest. Pye Records has, furthermore, established its Marble Arch Label in the forefront of the growing market for lower-priced LPs.</p>
<p>Overseas, the sale of Pye Records has increased by nearly 9%.</p>
<p><strong>MUSIC PUBLISHING.</strong> Our joint companies with Chappells are progressing well.</p>
<p><strong>MUZAK.</strong> Over 180 leading companies, practically all household names in British industry, now have the Muzak service of background music installed in one or more of their premises. The rate of recruitment to the Muzak service is greater than at any previous time in the company&#8217;s history, and shows recognition of the fact that Muzak provides the only programmed background music service with completely non-repetitive new programmes every day.</p>
<p><strong>AMBASSADOR BOWLING.</strong> This company continues to operate profitably despite reduced attendance at bowling centres throughout the country.</p>
<h2>TOP DIRECTION — YOUR BOARD &#8211; INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS — ATV STAFF</h2>
<p><strong>TOP DIRECTION.</strong> The rate at which your Company has developed and the steadily widening scope of what I have referred to in earlier Reports as our policy of &#8220;Planned Expansion,&#8221; has necessitated a new framework at the top.</p>
<p>The new post of Chief Executive has been created, ond this will naturally be filled by Mr. Lew Grade. Knowing, as I do, what every phase of your Company&#8217;s activities owes to the brilliant direction of Mr. Grade, let me add that it is only fitting that he should also be appointed a Deputy Chairman of your Company.</p>
<p>The name of Mr. Grade is synonymous with the emergence, over little more than a decode, of the name of ATV as a Company of world-wide standing; and I am delighted to have this opportunity of congratulating him.</p>
<p>I can, moreover, regard myself as fortunate in having on the Board a Deputy Managing Director in the person of Mr. Robin Gill, to whom the wider duties of Managing Director can so confidently be entrusted. I om happy to add my thanks to Mr. Gill for the great part which he is playing in your Company&#8217;s affairs. The partnership between Mr. Grade ond Mr. Gill to which I have referred earlier in connection with our Overseas Sales, is one which I am happy to say extends also to every aspect of your Company&#8217;s business.</p>
<p>During the post year. Mr. Grade become Chairman of Independent Television’s Network Planning Committee, and Mr. Robin Gill hos been asked to continue for a further period as Chairman of the Independent Television Companies Association.</p>
<p>My thanks, too, must go to the Company&#8217;s Finance Director, Mr. Jack Gill whose contribution to the running of the Company has proved of immense value.</p>
<p>Finally, I have to report that, owing to other business commitments, Mr. R. P. T. Gibson has tendered his resignation from your Board. Mr. Gibson has been a Director of your Company since 1957, ond I om only sorry that this long connection should now be broken.</p>
<p><strong>BOARD OF ASSOCIATED TELEVISION.</strong> Let me say how deeply appreciative I am of all the help which I have received over the year from the various members of your most distinguished and experienced Board.</p>
<p><strong>INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS.</strong> Despite the unprecedented problems set by the Government&#8217;s Prices and Incomes policy, the Group has been able to continue its progressive approach towards the Unions, and has maintained good relations with its staff and with the Unions with which it negotiates.</p>
<p>A completely new system to productivity payments on the part of ATV Network Ltd. was worked out with the Unions and has been approved by the Ministry of Labour. New inter-Union arrangements were negotiated for Century 21 Productions, and these will eliminate various awkward lines of demarcation.</p>
<p><strong>MANAGEMENT AND STAFF.</strong> My co-Directors join me in expressing their warmest thanks to everyone at all levels: Managerial staff, sales staff, accountancy staff and secretarial staff play their part equally with the technicians, the skilled craftsmen and the artistic producers and directors within the Company, and without their loyal and untiring efforts these admirable results could never have been attained.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://associatedtelevision.network/company/reports/atv-financial-results-1967/">ATV financial results: 1967</a> appeared first on <a href="https://associatedtelevision.network">THIS IS ATV NETWORK from Transdiffusion</a>.</p>
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		<title>ATV financial results: 1966</title>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Chairman&#039;s Statement]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 23 Aug 2023 09:50:35 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Financial reports]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[405-lines]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[ATV Network]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Court Martial]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Crossroads]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Danger Man]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[financial results]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[J Rosenthal Toys]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Jubilee Music]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lady Penelope]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lew Grade]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[McGill]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Muzak Corporation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[New World Music]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pye Records]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Robert Renwick]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Sunday Night at the London Palladium]]></category>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p>Lord Renwick on Associated Television Limited's 1966 results</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://associatedtelevision.network/company/reports/atv-financial-results-1966/">ATV financial results: 1966</a> appeared first on <a href="https://associatedtelevision.network">THIS IS ATV NETWORK from Transdiffusion</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-57to67.png"><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" src="https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-57to67.png" alt="Associated Television Limited" width="1170" height="299" class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-1982" srcset="https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-57to67.png 1170w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-57to67-300x77.png 300w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-57to67-768x196.png 768w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-57to67-1024x262.png 1024w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-57to67-720x184.png 720w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-57to67-675x173.png 675w" sizes="auto, (max-width: 1170px) 100vw, 1170px" /></a></p>
<blockquote><p>&#8220;Results no less than excellent&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<div style="border:3px solid black;margin:20px;padding:20px;">
<p>The 11th Annual General Meeting will be held at ATV House, Great Cumberland Piece, London, W.1., on Thursday, 22rd September, 1966 at 12 noon.</p>
<p>Extracts from the Statement by the Chairman, Lord Renwick, K.B.E., can be found on this page.</p>
</div>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h2>Profits, tax and levy</h2>
<p><strong>The Consolidated Profit and Loss Account shows a profit for the Group, before Levy and taxation of £11,059,311</strong> <em>[£171m in today&#8217;s money allowing for inflation – Ed]</em><strong>. This represents an increase of £1,699,370</strong> <em>[£26.3m]</em> <strong>over the results of the previous year (£9,359,941</strong> <em>[£144.7m]</em><strong>).</strong></p>
<p><strong>Moreover, this year&#8217;s trading has had to bear the full brunt of 12 months&#8217; Levy on Television Advertising Revenue. Thus, the sum of £5,432,366</strong> <em>[£84m]</em> <strong>had to be set aside for this purpose, as against the sum of £3,837,593</strong> <em>[£59.3m]</em> <strong>for the 8 months of the year to the 4th April, 1965 — the year in which the Levy was introduced.</strong></p>
<p><strong>Taxation for the year amounts to £2,780,325</strong> <em>[£43m]</em> <strong>as against last year&#8217;s figure of £2,752,639</strong> <em>[£42.6m]</em>. <strong>In total, therefore. Levy and taxation have consumed no less than £8,212,691</strong> <em>[£127m]</em> <strong>(74%) of the Group profit.</strong></p>
<p><strong>It should furthermore be noted that this figure of Levy and taxation payable to the Exchequer is in addition to the sum of</strong> £985,253 <em>[£15.2m]</em> <strong>payable to the Independent Television Authority for the rental of the London and Midlands Transmitters.</strong></p>
<p><strong>Nevertheless, the Group profit after Levy and taxation amounts to the final figure of £2,846,620</strong> <em>[£44m]</em> <strong>as compared with £2,769,709</strong> <em>[£42.8m]</em> <strong>for the previous year.</strong></p>
<h2>EFFECT OF GOVERNMENT POLICY</h2>
<p><strong>In June your Directors announced the intention of recommending a final dividend of 10%, making a total of 26% for the year. The year&#8217;s accounts were accordingly drawn up on this basis.</strong></p>
<p><strong>In view, however, of the Government White Paper, &#8220;Prices and Incomes Standstill&#8221;, I have to tell you that your Directors now feel bound to recommend that the final dividend should be 6½% and not 10%, thus leaving the total dividend at 22½%, as for the previous year.</strong></p>
<h2>EXPANSION</h2>
<p>The Chairman of a Company which is expanding so rapidly as Associated Television naturally finds himself at a disadvantage in preparing a Report which must suffer some delay before it can reach the hands of the shareholders.</p>
<p>Accordingly, even though these developments have occurred after the end of the financial year under review, I feel that I should report several new acquisitions to your Group’s interests.</p>
<p>First, there is our joint undertaking with Chappell’s in music publishing through our acquisition of a 50% interest in two companies New World Music Limited and Jubilee Music Inc. Secondly, there is the 50% interest in a new publishing company to be formed jointly with the International Publishing Corporation to operate in the general field of educational and industrial training publications and in connection with television programmes.</p>
<p>Thirdly, we have now acquired the remaining 50% of Pye Records making the company a 100% subsidiary of ours.</p>
<p>In addition we have acquired the remaining 49% minority interest in J. Rosenthal (Toys) and are arranging for the acquisition of a 7½ % interest in an insurance company already established by IPC, Reeds Paper Group and Eagle Star.</p>
<h2>THEATRES</h2>
<p>In my last Report, I referred to your Company’s “largest and most important single investment” in the shape of the acquisition of the whole of the share capital of the Stoll Theatres Corporation and of Moss Empires.</p>
<p>I am now happy to be able to speak of the eminently satisfactory &#8211; indeed substantially improved &#8211; results of the Theatre Croup, under the Chairmanship of Mr. Prince Littler.</p>
<p>A new record was established for the London Palladium; and, throughout the West End, our theatres played to well-filled houses. Conspicuous among other successes has been Noël Coward’s repertoire of three plays at the Queen’s Theatre which played to capacity business, and “Hello, Dolly!” at Drury Lane.</p>
<p>It is nevertheless sad that the theatre industry, so recently relieved of the burden of Entertainment Tax, should now be saddled with rising costs deriving from the Selective Employment Tax.</p>
<h2>ATV NETWORK</h2>
<p><a href="https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/eyeboxout-65-66-68-69.png"><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" src="https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/eyeboxout-65-66-68-69-150x150.png" alt="ATV symbol" width="150" height="150" class="alignright size-thumbnail wp-image-2021" srcset="https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/eyeboxout-65-66-68-69-150x150.png 150w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/eyeboxout-65-66-68-69-300x300.png 300w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/eyeboxout-65-66-68-69-70x70.png 70w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/eyeboxout-65-66-68-69-377x377.png 377w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/eyeboxout-65-66-68-69-353x353.png 353w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/eyeboxout-65-66-68-69.png 500w" sizes="auto, (max-width: 150px) 100vw, 150px" /></a></p>
<p>In my last year’s Statement I referred to your Company’s policy of “planned expansion”. As this expansion of activities extended into fields other than television, it became increasingly apparent to your Board that a completely new Company framework was required. Accordingly, steps were taken to reconstruct the Group in such a way that the parent Company would become purely the holding Company of its various trading subsidiaries &#8211; including a new subsidiary company to be entrusted with the Television Service operated under licence from the Independent Television Authority.</p>
<p>In April, 1966, this major move was completed. A subsidiary company, ATV Network, was created. It was to this new company that, with the agreement of the Independent Television Authority. the Programme Contract with the Authority and the ancillary television activities were transferred.</p>
<div id="results-boxout-right">
<h2 class="results-banner">Transdiffusion analysis</h2>
<p>As originally conceived, the Levy was to be a tax on the profits of all ITV companies. It was, fairly well at the last minute, converted into a tax on advertising turnover.</p>
<p>The first version would&#8217;ve been far worse for Associated Television Limited than for the other three members of the Big Four. Granada TV Network was a subsidiary of a cinemas and leisure chain. ABC was a subsidiary of a film making, distributing and exhibition company. Rediffusion was a subsidiary of BET, a giant industrial combine that did everything from buses to laundries to heavy plant hire. The key here is that those ITV companies are subsidiaries – little self-contained bubbles that can only be taxed on what they do as ITV companies.</p>
<p>ATV was organised the opposite way. The ITV company sat at the top of the tree, with everything else – theatres, toys, magazines, records, bowling alleys – being owned by it. But should someone suggest altering the Levy to a &#8216;fairer&#8217; tax on profits – as ATV themselves have accidentally argued for repeatedly – the results would be devastating. The reformulated Levy would start taking cash from the tills at Ambassador Bowling alleys and Bermans &#038; Nathans costumiers. The ludicrousness of this wouldn&#8217;t particularly matter to the proposer of such a change.</p>
<p>It mattered to ATV, who have turned the company on its head. Associated Television Limited is now an empty holding company, doing nothing but owning subsidiaries that do stuff. The ITV contractor is now ATV Network Ltd, one of those subsidiaries (and, coincidentally, this marks the point that &#8216;ATV&#8217; on-air stopped meaning &#8216;Associated TeleVision&#8217; and the initials no longer stood for anything). Any raid on ITV profits would not now take money from Stoll-Moss and Pye Records.</p>
<hr />
<p>Something that <em>is</em> taking money away from the whole group, however, is the new Selective Employment Tax. Last year&#8217;s boom has faltered and export of physical commodities is seen as a way of reversing this. How do you make companies manufacture more? By subsidising them. How do you subsidise them when there&#8217;s no money in the kitty to do so? By getting more export dollars. The way out of this chicken/egg problem was to impose an additional tax on service industries – any company that <em>does</em> something rather than <em>makes</em> something – and redistribute that money to the manufacturers. Also, the people don&#8217;t want to work in factories any more, they would like nice office or creative jobs. You can&#8217;t tax people in service industry jobs more directly, not if you want to win any election ever, but you can make the <em>employers</em> less keen to hire people for those jobs.</p>
<p>S.E.T. was a flat tax on service industry employers. They had to pay 25s [£1.25 in decimal, about £19.35 in today&#8217;s money] per adult male employee per week. Reflecting the fact that these were sexist times and that it was adult men who were mostly wanted for the factories, the flat rate per week for women and &#8216;boys&#8217; (men under 18) was 12s 6d [62½p, about £9.66] and for &#8216;girls&#8217; a mere 8s [40p, about £6.18].</p>
</div>
<h2>TV WORLD</h2>
<p>The Midlands programme journal for Independent Television is published by Odhams Press Limited on behalf of ATV Network and ABC Television Limited. The success of the magazine has been unprecedented, and sales have risen steadily to well beyond the 700,000 mark.</p>
<h2>MERCHANDISING</h2>
<p>In none of your Company’s subsidiaries has expansion been more rapid or more satisfactory.</p>
<p>The publishing venture, in association with the News of the World Organisation of the two magazines &#8220;TV Century 21” and &#8220;Lady Penelope&#8221;, has proved eminently successful, and their combined circulation is over the million mark.</p>
<p>The new subsidiary company, J. Rosenthal (Toys), which markets products associated with television programmes is now equipped to become the major distributor in this field, and shows substantial profits.</p>
<h2>COLOUR</h2>
<p>Colour on the 405-line standard could be made immediately available to the entire British receiving public in the existing VHF services. Those viewers content to watch only black-and-white pictures would remain entirely unaffected. If 405-line Colour Television were authorised in the New Year, ATV Network alone could immediately contribute not less than 20 hours of Colour programmes a week to the Independent Network.</p>
<p>In order that this country should not lag behind in the development of Colour Television, we therefore advocate the earliest possible introduction by the ITA of colour on the 405-line standard in the existing VHF service. By this Autumn, ATV Network’s Studios in London and Elstree will be equipped for Colour operations in the various international line-systems.</p>
<h2>EXPORTS</h2>
<p>For the first time in television history, British series have been purchased simultaneously by all three American TV Networks. Columbia Broadcasting System purchased 45 episodes of “Secret Agent&#8221; (known to British viewers as &#8220;Danger Man”), the National Broadcasting Company purchased &#8220;The Saint”, and &#8220;The London Palladium Show”, and the American Broadcasting Company purchased &#8220;The Baron”, “Court Martial” (jointly produced with MCA), and &#8220;McGill”, a new series for next season. The triple jackpot of selling to all three networks has at last fallen into British hands.</p>
<p>I am glad, moreover, to be able to say that, for the Eastern Hemisphere, the sales curve of ITC continues to point sharply upwards. Indeed, for the first six months of the current calendar year total sales approximate to the whole of the previous 12 months&#8217; turnover. These sales have been made in more than 50 different countries.</p>
<h2>FILM-MAKING</h2>
<p>Another intensive programme of film production is currently in hand, including &#8220;The Saint” and &#8220;McGill&#8221; together with a new Patrick McGoohan series &#8220;The Prisoner”.</p>
<h2>PYE RECORDS</h2>
<p>This is the first Annual Report in which I am able to refer to Pye Records as a wholly-owned subsidiary, even though the results contained within the Consolidated Profit and Loss Account reflect only the dividends received under the 50% ownership which then existed.</p>
<p>During the past year, Pye Records has maintained a leading position within the industry. Although in the United States the sudden vogue for British Pop records has somewhat declined, sales have remained good and the overseas sales of Pye Records in other markets have shown a steady improvement.</p>
<h2>THE MIDLANDS</h2>
<p>At no time in your Company’s history, has the operation of the weekday licence played so conspicuous a part in Midland affairs and the scope of local programming has notably increased.</p>
<p>The first successful five-day-a-week serial, “Crossroads&#8221;, originates in Birmingham, and has proved to be nationally popular.</p>
<p>Another Midlands ATV Network programme &#8211; this time designed for the young &#8211; &#8220;Tingha and Tucker&#8221; has, as a result of its overwhelming local popularity, now won itself a place in the national Sunday network.</p>
<h2>MUZAK</h2>
<p>It is all the more agreeable, bearing in mind the originally slow acceptance of this commercial and industrial amenity, to be able at last to refer to its established success. Growth has been rapid, and the daily Muzak audience in the British Isles now numbers some 2,000,000 persons.</p>
<h2>BOWLING</h2>
<p>In the year under review, the ten bowling centres, comprising 273 bowling lanes, produced satisfactory results showing an improvement over the previous year.</p>
<p>The effects of the Selective Employment Tax cannot do other than affect future profitability.</p>
<h2>MANAGEMENT AND STAFF</h2>
<p>The debt which your Company owes to the efforts of its Managing Director, Mr. Lew Grade, can in no way be exaggerated. His energy, flair and foresight are apparent in every phase of the Company’s operations and, once again, I most gladly take this opportunity, on your behalf, of thanking him.</p>
<p>I am glad, too, to place on record how fortunate I feel that the Company was to secure the services of Mr. Robin Gill as Deputy Managing Director. The top management team of Mr. Lew Grade and Mr Robin Gill has proved an inestimable asset in the Company’s manifold and expanding affairs.</p>
<p>No less do I and my co-Directors wish to thank all members of Staff throughout the Group. The present healthy and vigorous condition of the Company could never have been achieved without their loyal and devoted work.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://associatedtelevision.network/company/reports/atv-financial-results-1966/">ATV financial results: 1966</a> appeared first on <a href="https://associatedtelevision.network">THIS IS ATV NETWORK from Transdiffusion</a>.</p>
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		<title>ATV financial results: 1963</title>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Chairman&#039;s Statement]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 16 Aug 2023 09:50:46 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Financial reports]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ambassador Bowling]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[British Relay Wireless & Television]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Broadway Goes Latin]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Charles Hill]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Edward Roth]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Espionage]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[financial results]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Fireball XL5]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[ITV-2]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lew Grade]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Look Around]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lunch Box]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Midland Montage]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Midland Profile]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Muzak Corporation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Norman Collins]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pye Records]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Robert Renwick]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sir Ivone Kirkpatrick]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sir John Carmichael]]></category>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p>Sir Robert Renwick on Associated Television Limited's 1963 results</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://associatedtelevision.network/company/reports/atv-financial-results-1963/">ATV financial results: 1963</a> appeared first on <a href="https://associatedtelevision.network">THIS IS ATV NETWORK from Transdiffusion</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-57to67.png"><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" src="https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-57to67.png" alt="Associated Television Limited" width="1170" height="299" class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-1982" srcset="https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-57to67.png 1170w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-57to67-300x77.png 300w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-57to67-768x196.png 768w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-57to67-1024x262.png 1024w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-57to67-720x184.png 720w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-57to67-675x173.png 675w" sizes="auto, (max-width: 1170px) 100vw, 1170px" /></a></p>
<h2>REASONS FOR DECLINE IN PROFITS</h2>
<h2>LEVY ON TURNOVER A DISTORTION OF TAXATION PRINCIPLE</h2>
<h2>GOOD NEWS REGARDING SECOND INDEPENDENT CHANNEL</h2>
<h2>SIR ROBERT RENWICK ON EFFECT OF NEW AGREEMENTS</h2>
<p><a href="https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-robertrenwick.jpg"><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" src="https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-robertrenwick-300x335.jpg" alt="Robert Renwick" width="300" height="335" class="alignright size-medium wp-image-1987" srcset="https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-robertrenwick-300x335.jpg 300w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-robertrenwick-768x859.jpg 768w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-robertrenwick-337x377.jpg 337w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-robertrenwick-316x353.jpg 316w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-robertrenwick.jpg 788w" sizes="auto, (max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px" /></a></p>
<p>The 8th annual general meeting of Associated Television Limited will be held on 26th August, 1963, at 12 noon at ATV House, Great Cumberland Place. London W.1</p>
<p>The following is the statement of the chairman. Sir Robert Renwick, Bt., B.E. circulated with the report and accounts for eleven months ended 31st March, 1963:-</p>
<p>Your Directors decided that it was in the interest of the Company to change its year-end date from 30th April to 31st March and the Accounts now before you are, therefore, for a period of eleven months to 31st March, 1963.</p>
<p>You will see from the Consolidated Profit and Loss Account that the profit of the Group before taxation is £3,405,714 <em>[£59.1m in today&#8217;s money allowing for inflation – Ed]</em> for the eleven months as compared with £5,038,204 <em>[£87.5m]</em> for the previous twelve months. This profit is after charging all expenses including depreciation. Taxation based on the profit for the period amounts to £1,556,005 <em>[£27m]</em> and, after making allowance for this and for the interests of outside shareholders, there is left a profit of £1,860,135 <em>[£32.3m]</em> attributable to ATV</p>
<p>The amount retained in subsidiary companies is £249,706 <em>[£4.3m]</em> leaving £1,610,429 <em>[£28m]</em>. Arising from the change in the Parent Company&#8217;s year-end date, certain provisions for taxation, made in previous years, amounting £1,546,000 <em>[£26.8m]</em> are no longer required and, together with the unappropriated balance brought forward from last year of £2,424,909 <em>[£42m]</em>, make available for appropriation now an amount of £5,581,338 <em>[£96.9m]</em>.</p>
<p>An interim dividend of 20% has already been paid and your Directors now recommend a final dividend of 21.25% making a total of 41.25% for the eleven months. This is equivalent to 45% for the full year as against 60% paid in respect of the year to 30th April, 1962. If this recommendation is approved and after transferring a further £500,000 <em>[£8.7m]</em> to Investment Reserve there will be left a balance of £3,906,486 <em>[£67.8m]</em> in the Accounts of the Parent Company.</p>
<h2>Balance Sheet Items</h2>
<p>Turning to the Consolidated Balance Sheet it will be noted that the Investment Reserve has been used to offset the Goodwill arising on consolidation. Current Assets have increased during the period by £518,077 <em>[£9m]</em> to £8,558,556 <em>[£149m]</em> whereas Current Liabilities have decreased by £816,170 <em>[£14.2m]</em> to £7,440,500 <em>[£129.2m]</em>. It will be noted, however, that Advances from Bankers have increased by £1,781,020 <em>[£30.9m]</em> to £3,018,618 <em>[£52.4m]</em>; this is in the main due to increased investment in the Group&#8217;s Fixed and Current Assets and the payment of an exceptionally heavy taxation liability in respect of the financial year 1960/61.</p>
<p>In deciding to change the year-end date from 30th April to 31st March, your Board recognised that this would inevitably mean the exclusion of the profit deriving from one of the more remunerative months in the calendar. Had the trading results for April been included, the profit figures would have been substantially higher.</p>
<p>A decline in profits would nevertheless have been revealed. This decline is due to a variety of causes. In the first place, there has been a drop in revenue from advertising of approximately 5%. Secondly, certain of the subsidiary companies have, as anticipated, made losses in the early stages of their development. Thirdly, the Company was feeling the full effects of the new agreements with Equity and the Musicians&#8217; Union and, to a lesser extent, of a new agreement with the Variety Artistes&#8217; Federation. Some indication of the increases which the Company had to meet in programme expenditure may be gauged by citing a few examples. The settlement with Equity on which work was resumed on 6th April, 1962, provided a new minimum fee for an actor on a networked programme of 36 guineas <em>[£37.80 in decimal, £656 with inflation]</em>; the old fee was 10 guineas <em>[£10.50/£182]</em>. The settlement with the Variety Artistes Federation reached on 17th November, 1961, provided for a new minimum fee of £30 <em>[£521]</em> for a networked programme as against 10 guineas: the settlement with the Musicians&#8217; Union reached on 10th April, 1962, gave a minimum fee of £18 <em>[£312]</em> for a networked programme as against £6 <em>[£104]</em> under the previous arrangement.</p>
<div id="results-boxout-right">
<h2 class="results-banner">Transdiffusion analysis</h2>
<p>Whilst the vast bulk of the Pilkington Report was, rightly, ignored for being completely unworkable in practice, enough of the spirit behind it remained to trouble ITV in general and ATV in particular.</p>
<p>From the point of view of politicians, who being in London only saw the output of ATV&#8217;s weekend service and could only contrast it with A-R&#8217;s more sober offerings on weekdays, ATV was making a lot of money for doing very little. For the press, it was a stick to beat ITV with, since they were in direct competition for advertising revenue and indirect competition for news and editorial. ATV, in particular, made a good target because a substantial slice of the company was owned by the Daily Mirror, a socialist newspaper in a print market dominated by Conservative-supporting press barons. Attacking ATV therefore suited everybody – politicians could say they were concerned about their constituents&#8217; educational and social needs; the government could raise money from it without raising taxation on individuals; the Tory press could undermine both Britain&#8217;s most popular newspaper, the Daily Mirror, and somehow point to ATV as being symptomatic of how bad a Labour government would be; and the great and the good could bemoan how terrible things like the Palladium show were from their lofty positions on BBCtv and Third Programme discussion programmes.</p>
<p>In the end, it all boiled down to three facts: there would be no ITV-2; the BBC would get a second, upmarket, channel as a way of helping them to compete with ITV; and the excess profits of ITV in general and ATV in particular could be syphoned out and put to better uses.</p>
<p>How to implement that latter one, though? Of the Big 4, ATV was unusual. The other three companies were subsidiaries of larger companies. ABC was part of the second largest cinema chain. Granada was part of a growing leisure combine. A-R was a small part of the massive industrial combine British Electric Traction. All three had expanded into related business, using the profits from ITV to pay for them. But each new venture was a fellow-subsidiary of the bigger group above it. Only ATV was first and foremost an ITV company, and its diversifications were subsidiaries of that ITV company, not of an overall group.</p>
<p>If the Chancellor wanted to raid ITV to grab a share of the profits – and he very much did – then three of the Big 4 would be protected, as the money would come from the ITV subsidiary rather than the group. But for ATV, the Chancellor would be reaching directly into the pockets of not only ATV but also ITC, Stoll, Pye Records, British Relay, bowling alleys and piped music.</p>
<p>The original plan was for the government just to help itself to a share of the profits (this part was definitely an attack on ATV itself). The amount of lobbying ATV had to do to stop this was tremendous. Having sat with nothing to do since the rise of Lew Grade, the previously sidelined Norman Collins was given the job of pressing flesh, writing newspaper articles, schmoozing cabinet ministers and generally lobbying loudly wherever the opportunity presented. It worked.</p>
<p>The new Levy was to be taken from money made from advertising instead of general revenue. However, there was a wrinkle. Fearful of how companies might silo the advertising money or raise advertising rates to pay for it, the Levy was raised on turnover: the money as it came in through the door, before it was processed or apportioned. That this would fall hardest on the two companies with two regions – ATV and ABC – was a side effect but, in the case of ATV, one the government didn&#8217;t really mind.</p>
</div>
<h2>Threat of the Television Bill</h2>
<p>Historically, the year 1962/63 will be remembered by your Board as one of many and major preoccupations, chiefly concerned with the future of Independent Television in general and with the future of this Company in particular.</p>
<p>In June, 1962, the Report of the Pilkington Committee, which was appointed in July, 1960, was at last published. This Report, which proved to be hostile towards Independent Television as a whole, recommended the total abolition of the system as we know it to-day and the substitution for it of a system whereby the Independent Television Authority was to plan the programmes, arrange for their networking and for the selling of the advertising time – leaving Companies, such at ATV, to play the role merely of programme suppliers to a Government Authority.</p>
<p>It is to the credit of the Government that the main recommendations of the Pilkington Report were rejected. Nevertheless, when, on 20th December, 1962, the Postmaster-General presented his Television Bill it was immediately apparent that the atmosphere Pilkington was still pervasive. For, although it was recommended that the Programme Companies should continue as full operators of the television service in their various areas, it was laid down in the Bill that the Authority should be able to specify not only which programmes should be networked but at what price the originator should be required to supply them.</p>
<p>Nor was this all. The financial provisions in the Bill included a clause empowering the Postmaster-General to impose additional charges on the Programme Companies by way of a tax on profits deriving not only from the operation of a television licence but from the operation of any subsidiary company or companies.</p>
<p>It was because your Board felt that such a discriminatory tax was most improper that we took action. First, I wrote to shareholders warning them of the gravity of the situation; then, on behalf of your Board, I issued a number of statements to the Press; finally, I sought, and obtained, an interview with the Postmaster-General and corresponded with him. Throughout I made it my business to see that Members on both sides of Parliament were informed of the true facts of the situation</p>
<p>I mention these matters because in certain quarters much play has been made of a Television Lobby and the activities of a so-called Television &#8220;pressure group&#8221;. Those who have been most vociferous in expressing their disapproval have completely ignored the fact that within Independent Television there are nearly as many points of view as there are Companies, and that it was only in respect of certain limited objectives that there was any measure of agreement at all. This state of affairs seems to me healthy. democratic and in the true spirit of free enterprise.</p>
<p>So far as ATV is concerned I would regard it as a total dereliction of my duty as Chairman if, faced by a situation which could obviously be grievously harmful to your Company, I had not exerted every legitimate effort to induce the Government to revise its thinking.</p>
<p>The Board, and shareholders in general, have every reason to be grateful to your Deputy Chairman, Mr. Norman Collins, for the unsparing and untiring work which he devoted to securing improvement in the Television Bill.</p>
<h2>An Ill-conceived Levy</h2>
<p>Not that our efforts were entirely successful. Quite the contrary, in fact. For on 25th April, 1963, the Postmaster General suddenly withdrew his proposed omnibus tax on profits and substituted for it an arbitrary – and I think thoroughly ill-conceived – levy on turnover. In my view the levy is entirely mis-applied. The purpose of a turnover tax, as it is usually called. is to extract money for the Exchequer at the various stages where profit has accrued in a developing economic process – say between the suppliers of raw materials, the manufacturers, the wholesalers and the retailers. To attempt to apply it to an industry such as Independent Television which has only one operation – the earning money from advertisements to enable it to put out a free service to the public – is clearly a distortion of this taxation principle.</p>
<p>In order to substantiate our case financial statements were made freely available to the Postmaster General and to his colleagues. These statements clearly indicated one thing, viz., that a levy on turnover would affect some Companies far worse than others – your own Company, I regret to say, worst of all.</p>
<p>Why? For the simple and inescapable reason that ATV with its dual and divided seven-day operation in London and the Midlands has two lots of overheads, two lots of studios, two lots of offices, two lots of programme costs and so forth. The revenue – now to be subject to the levy – earned from this dual operation is no larger, and may indeed be smaller, than the revenue earned by a Company operating a five-day service in one area only with one lot of overheads, one lot of studios, one lot of offices, one lot of programme costs and so forth.</p>
<p>The Postmaster General has now said that he will look to the Authority to iron out these inequalities by imposing a system of differential rentals as between the various Companies. It may well prove to be the case, however, that the inequalities are so great that it is only by some measure of re-allocation of days or areas that the Authority will be able to seek to redress the balance.</p>
<h2>Competition Achieved</h2>
<p>Nevertheless, if your Board has failed in some of its efforts, there is cause for congratulation on one matter of major importance. On 27th June the Postmaster General announced in the House that by 1966, when there should be not fewer than 1½ million television sets in London capable of receiving a new 625-line service in UHF, he would authorise a second Independent Channel in the main areas. That is good news indeed and does much to remove the sourness of a singularly long and frustrating series of negotiations. It represents the culmination of a campaign that your Company alone has fought from the very beginning of Independent Television. Over the years we have repeated in Annual Report after Annual Report that we have never believed that a single Independent Television Service could comply with the basic requirements of the 1954 Television Act that &#8220;there is adequate competition to supply programmes between a number of programme contractors independent of each other both as to finance and also to control.&#8221; Within a single service the Companies inevitably tend to be complementary rather than competitive. Your own Board, moreover, has always felt that the advertisers. on whom the revenue to support Independent Television depends, should enjoy the freedom of buying in a competitive rather than a monopolistic market.</p>
<p>As the pioneer Company in advocating competition, ATV looks to play its full part over the years in the expanding field of Independent Television.</p>
<p>In the meantime. and for the immediate future. we have concentrated our efforts on making the most effective contribution that can be made in both the areas in which, under the terms of the licence, we are required to provide programmes. The success of London programming at the week-ends will be familiar to all the viewers who live within range of the Croydon transmitter.</p>
<h2>4,000,000 Audience in the Midlands</h2>
<p>Not that we regard our Midland audience as in any way less important. For those who do not live within the area served by the Lichfield transmitter I should report that for the first time our audiences have topped the four million mark. Many notable figures from all political parties and from all walks of life have appeared in programmes. These have included the Prime Minister, both when he addressed the Birmingham Chamber of Commerce early this year and also when he made his important announcement on leadership only last month at Wolverhampton. In such regional programmes as &#8220;Midland Montage&#8221;, &#8220;Midland Profile&#8221;, and &#8220;Look Around&#8221;. Mr. Iain Macleod and Mr Ernest Marples have appeared; and Miss Jenny Lee and Mr Roy Jenkins have spoken for Labour.</p>
<p>ATV is particularly proud of being the first Company to introduce a regular mid-day programme, and Noele Gordon&#8217;s &#8220;Lunch Box&#8221;, now in its seventh year, is already running into its 1,600th edition. Scarcely less important is the children&#8217;s programme conducted by Jean Morton, &#8220;The Tingha and Tucker Club&#8221;, which now has an estimated membership of half a million children and is firmly established as the most popular children&#8217;s programme in Midland television.</p>
<h2>Company&#8217;s Multiple Interests</h2>
<p>From the earliest days of the Company your Board decided on a policy of diversification. In the result our production subsidiary, Incorporated Television Company Limited, has traded widely throughout the Eastern Hemisphere. ITC Ltd. deals with 42 countries in the Eastern Hemisphere, 21 of them in Europe, nine in the Middle East and North Africa, seven in Australasia and the Far East, and five Commonwealth countries in Africa. ITC Ltd. also deals with the three of the Islands in the British Caribbean which operate a television service.</p>
<p>During the twelve months ended 31st March, 1963, over 5,600 hours were sold in these territories, approximately 4,300 hours being sales of film series, the balance telerecordings and documentary-type programmes.</p>
<p>Sales in these areas in this period amounted to £336,810 <em>[£5.9m]</em>, and this is a steadily expanding market.</p>
<p>In the U.S.A., Independent Television Corporation has again shown progress in distributing our productions in the Western Hemisphere. Though trading conditions have been difficult within the USA. this Company since its inception has brought not less than $12 million <em>[$119.3m]</em> into this country.</p>
<p>&#8220;Fireball XL5&#8221;, beginning in the autumn, has been taken for showing on one of the principal American networks, while both &#8220;The Saint&#8221; and &#8220;Broadway Goes Latin&#8221; are being sold for syndication.</p>
<p>In partnership with the National Broadcasting Corporation of America and Herbert Brodkin, we are producing twenty-six one-hour episodes of &#8220;Espionage&#8221; in England. Our Group has world-wide distribution rights in this series outside the U.S.A. The series is to be shown on the N.B.C. Network as well as by our Company in the U.K. and has already been sold for transmission in Australia, Canada and Japan. The production on film of any television series necessitates considerable expenditure which can be recovered only over a period of years and provided a satisfactory sale can be secured in the U.S.A. Not the least of the reasons for deprecating the new levy on turnover is the fact that less money will be available for the production of film series which are vitally important both for home use and for export.</p>
<p>I am happy to say that Australia has emerged from its recession to which I referred last year and the results from our group investments in Australia have once again produced better figures. Our investment in Canada is also making satisfactory progress.</p>
<p>The build-up of our background music service, Muzak, is continuing slowly but steadily. It will be appreciated, however, that inevitably heavy investment in the development of this type of service will take some time before it can be fully recovered and the Company be made profit-making.</p>
<p>In the last eighteen months we have taken the first steps to set up and operate a chain of tenpin bowling centres. Our wholly owned subsidiary, Ambassador Bowling Limited, now has two centres in operation and a further three or four will be in operation in the course of the next twelve months. It is already apparent that tenpin bowling is a sport which has found considerable favour in this country and I am sure that this new venture of ours will prove remunerative over the years.</p>
<p>Pye Records Limited, in which your Company has a 50% holding, continues to make excellent progress and with the advent of its up-to-date recording studios will, I am confident, continue to expand.</p>
<p>As to our large investment in British Relay Wireless and Television, as shareholders will appreciate from the figures recently produced by that Company, it is progressing well.</p>
<h2>Top Management</h2>
<p>During the year under review,. your Company has seen major changes in top management. Mr. Val Parnell, who has acted as your Managing Director from the inception of the Company, retired at his own request. The services which he rendered during the formative years of the Company cannot be over-valued and we are delighted that he has agreed to remain on the Board and to act in a general advisory capacity, in addition to remaining responsible for one of the most popular programmes on Independent Television, &#8220;Val Parnell&#8217;s Sunday Night at the London Palladium&#8221;. Your Board was fortunate in having his successor so close at hand. Mr. Lew Grade, who over the years has acted as Mr. Parnell&#8217;s deputy, was immediately appointed to the top post. Mr. Grade&#8217;s appointment has proved to be universally popular throughout the industry and has been widely acclaimed by the Press. The Board regards itself as equally fortunate in obtaining the services as deputy to Mr. Grade of Mr. Edward J. Roth who, prior to joining your Company, was Director-General of Radio Eireann.</p>
<p>In the general context of Independent broadcasting as a whole I am happy that the date of this Annual Report makes it possible for me to be the first to express the feelings of the industry as a whole in welcoming the Rt. Hon. Dr. Charles Hill, now Lord Hill of Luton, as the new Chairman of the Authority. In doing so most warmly I will take this opportunity of thanking Sir John Carmichael who has acted Chairman since the retirement last November of Sir Ivone Kirkpatrick. Independent Television has never felt that it has had a wiser counsellor than Sir John. Once again I would like to express the appreciation of ATV to the Director-General of the ITA, Sir Robert Fraser, and to his colleagues within the Authority. </p>
<p>And now a word of tribute to our staff in London, Birmingham and elsewhere the world over. Despite the cloud of political uncertainties which has hung over the industry every member of ATV&#8217;s staff has worked most loyally throughout the year and the Board wishes to express its keen appreciation.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://associatedtelevision.network/company/reports/atv-financial-results-1963/">ATV financial results: 1963</a> appeared first on <a href="https://associatedtelevision.network">THIS IS ATV NETWORK from Transdiffusion</a>.</p>
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		<title>ATV financial results: 1960</title>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Chairman&#039;s Statement]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 09 Aug 2023 09:50:21 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p>Prince Littler on Associated Television Limited's 1960 results</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://associatedtelevision.network/company/reports/atv-financial-results-1960/">ATV financial results: 1960</a> appeared first on <a href="https://associatedtelevision.network">THIS IS ATV NETWORK from Transdiffusion</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-57to67.png"><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" src="https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-57to67.png" alt="Associated Television Limited" width="1170" height="299" class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-1982" srcset="https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-57to67.png 1170w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-57to67-300x77.png 300w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-57to67-768x196.png 768w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-57to67-1024x262.png 1024w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-57to67-720x184.png 720w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-57to67-675x173.png 675w" sizes="auto, (max-width: 1170px) 100vw, 1170px" /></a></p>
<h2>A Memorable Year Yielding Eminently Satisfactory Financial Results</h2>
<h2>SUCCESS OF BOARD&#8217;S DIVERSIFICATION POLICY</h2>
<h2>The Industry&#8217;s Growth Continues</h2>
<h2>MR. PRINCE LITTLER&#8217;S REVIEW OF ACTIVITIES</h2>
<p><a href="https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-princelittler.jpg"><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" src="https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-princelittler-300x335.jpg" alt="Prince Littler" width="300" height="335" class="alignright size-medium wp-image-1986" srcset="https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-princelittler-300x335.jpg 300w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-princelittler-768x859.jpg 768w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-princelittler-337x377.jpg 337w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-princelittler-316x353.jpg 316w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-princelittler.jpg 788w" sizes="auto, (max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px" /></a></p>
<p><strong>The Fifth Annual General  Meeting of Associated Television Limited will be held at A.T.V. House, Great Cumberland Place. London, W.1, on 28th September 1960.</strong></p>
<p><strong>The following is the statement by the chairman, Mr. Prince Littler, C.B.E.. which has been circulated with the report and accounts:-</strong></p>
<p>The year under review has proved to be a memorable one and has yielded eminently satisfactory financial results.</p>
<p>The proposed dividend means that the Company will have maintained its dividend at the equivalent of 100%, bearing in mind that the capital of the Company was doubled during the course of the past financial year.</p>
<h2>Board&#8217;s Policy</h2>
<p>The principal business of your Company is that of a Programme Contractor licensed by the Independent Television Authority to trade in London and the Midlands, and it is primarily upon this trading that these excellent results have been achieved. It has, however, from the inception of the Company, been the policy of the Board to make investments in allied fields both at home and abroad and, in consequence of this policy, the resources of your Company are now more strongly diversified than any time since it commenced trading.</p>
<p>Developments overseas have proved particularly gratifying in Australia and in Canada. It should, moreover, be noted that in the USA, your Company has recently acquired full control of the Independent Television Corporation of America.</p>
<p>The diversified interests at home are highly encouraging and include the operation of the Muzak franchise, a 50% interest in Pye Records and a substantial and most profitable investment in British Relay Wireless. All these developments will be reported in detail later in this statement.</p>
<div id="results-boxout-right">
<h2 class="results-banner">Transdiffusion analysis</h2>
<p>The early history of ATV is a tangle of initials, ownership, management and investment.</p>
<p>In the beginning, there were two companies: Associated Broadcasting Development Company (ABDC) and Incorporated Television Programme Company (ITPC). Very simplified, ABDC, under Norman Collins, applied for the London weekend contract but couldn&#8217;t afford to operate it. ITPC, under Lew Grade, didn&#8217;t want a regional franchise but wanted in on the new ITV and had money to spare. The solution was obvious: put the two together and you&#8217;ve got a functional ITV contractor.</p>
<p>ATV was, corporately, ABDC&#8217;s management with ITPC&#8217;s money. The two are now locked together: ABDC can&#8217;t exist without ITPC&#8217;s money, ITPC has no outlet on the new ITV without ABDC. ATV owns a slice of ITPC; ITPC owns a slice of ATV. There were, unsurprisingly, power struggles. A solution, it seemed at the time, was for ATV to buy ITC (the shifting of names and initialisms does not make following this any easier. ABDC > ABC (briefly, and <a href="http://abcatlarge.co.uk/" rel="noopener" target="_blank">not <em>that</em> one</a>) > ATV; ITPC > ITC, but with the &#8216;I&#8217; standing for different things in different countries just to make it even more awkward). Once they&#8217;re one company, there&#8217;s just one mission, right? But Lew Grade isn&#8217;t going to give up control of ITC and needs to be bought off with something. He gets it: more of those precious voting shares in ATV itself.</p>
</div>
<h2>Success of Consolidation Policy</h2>
<p>Your Company has been actively trading for some years. The period of licence from the Independent Television Authority extends until July 1964 and your Board has, with conspicuous success, sought to consolidate the Company&#8217;s position as the only major seven-day-a-week Company operating under licence from the Authority.</p>
<p>At the outset of operations your Managing Director, Mr. Val Parnell, and his Deputy Managing Director, Mr. Lew Grade, resisted the pressures put upon them to equip large studios and to build large offices. The volume of programming both for ATV&#8217;s own domestic purposes and for the Independent Network as a whole has, however, necessitated a plan of expansion, carefully phased over the past and current years. Your Company has therefore purchased the important riverside site at Vauxhall. Moreover, the Company has proceeded to enlarge its Elstree Studios in order to meet the steadily increasing commitments of live, tape and film production for home and overseas television as a whole.</p>
<h2>New Headquarters</h2>
<p>During the past year the headquarters of Associated Television Limited have been moved from Television House, Kingsway, to an island site office block in Great Cumberland Place, W.1. The effect of this move has been beneficial to the Staff, and has resulted in a marked increase in inter-departmental efficiency.</p>
<p>The financial results reflect the confidence expressed by your Board in December 1959 when an interim dividend of 8s. per share, less income tax, was declared on the Ordinary Shares of £1 each, and 2s, per share, less income tax, on the &#8216;A&#8217; Ordinary Stock Units of 5s. each.</p>
<h2>Bonus Issue Approved</h2>
<p>At an Extraordinary General Meeting held on the 21st January 1960 the shareholders passed a resolution, submitted by your Directors, for the capitalisation of £2,325,000 <em>[£44.3m in today&#8217;s money allowing for inflation – Ed]</em> of reserves by the issue of 9,300,000 &#8216;A&#8217; Ordinary Shares of 5s, each, credited as fully paid, to the holders of the then existing issued share capital in the proportion of four new shares for each existing Ordinary Share of £1 each and one new share for every existing &#8216;A&#8217; Ordinary Stock Unit of 5s, each. The new shares, on issue, were converted into &#8216;A&#8217; Ordinary Stock Units of 5s, each.</p>
<h2>Profits &#038; Dividends</h2>
<p>The Group profit before taxation for the year ended 30th April 1960 amounted to £5,388,330 <em>[£102.6m]</em> as compared with £5,316,493 <em>[£101.3m]</em> in the previous year. Taxation takes £2,711,820 <em>[£51.65m]</em> as against £2,715,076 <em>[£51.72m]</em>. The Group net profit is £2,676,510 <em>[£51m]</em> of which £1,031 <em>[£19,600]</em> is attributable to outside shareholders of subsidiaries leaving a profit attributable to the Parent Company of £2,675,479 <em>[£50.96m]</em> as against £2,601,048 <em>[£49.54m]</em> last year. The subsidiary companies retain £76,852 <em>[£1.5m]</em> leaving £2,598,627 <em>[£49.5m]</em> to be dealt with in the accounts of the Parent Company. To this amount must be added £1,711,215 <em>[£32.6m]</em>, the balance brought forward from the previous year, and £445,000 <em>[£8.5m]</em> transferred from General Reserve – making a total of £4,754,842 <em>[£90.6m]</em> before appropriations. Your Directors propose recommend a final dividend of 6/- per share on the Ordinary Shares of £1 each and 1/6 per share on the &#8216;A&#8217; Ordinary Stock Units of 5/- each. The interim dividend already paid and the proposed final dividend absorb £1,424,063 <em>[£27m]</em>. After deducting this amount, together with the sum of £2,325,000 <em>[£44.3m]</em> involved in the capitalisation effected in January and a transfer of £500,000 <em>[£9.5m]</em> to Investment Reserve, there is a balance of £505,779 <em>[£9.6m]</em> to be carried forward in the accounts of the Parent Company.</p>
<p>The accounts include provision for the distribution of £264,171 <em>[£5m]</em> for the Staff Profit-Sharing Scheme.</p>
<h2>Home Investments</h2>
<p>In the field of your Company&#8217;s home investments, it should be recorded that during the year British Relay Wireless and Television Limited made a bonus issue of one 5/- Ordinary Share for two 5/- Ordinary Shares. From this issue you Company obtained 134,000 new 5/- Ordinary Shares by way of capitalisation and the Conversion Right attached to your Company&#8217;s holding of £500,000 <em>[£9.5m]</em> 7% Convertible Unsecured Loan Stock 1967-1968 was increased from 184 to 201 shares for each £100 of stock. In March 1960 British Relay Wireless and Television Limited made a rights issue of two new 5/- Ordinary Shares for five 5/- Ordinary Shares and your Company subscribed for 562,800 new Ordinary Shares of 5 at 19/- each, which was its entitlement in respect of its shareholding and under the terms of the Loan Stock Trust Deed. The Stock is convertible on the 30th September 1961. The shares to which your Company would become entitled on conversion would, if there is no change in the present market price, have a value of approximately £1,100,000 <em>[£21m]</em>. British Relay Wireless and Television Limited has recently made a major extension in the Glasgow area and your Board remains confident that this investment will continue to grow.</p>
<h2>New Franchise Acquisition</h2>
<p>The subsidiary company which handles the sale of Muzak is developing most satisfactorily and a wide range of customers, including Banks, Hospitals, Hotels and Factories as well as Supermarkets, Restaurants and Shops, are installing this service. In the course of the current year operations have been extended to Birmingham and will shortly be followed by similar expansion in Manchester. In this connection shareholders will be interested to learn that we have acquired the Muzak franchise for Australia and New Zealand and it is felt that there is great opportunity for development of a background music service in this area.</p>
<p>Pye Records, in which your Company has a 50% interest, has been largely reorganised and the new plan of direct distribution to retailers has proved an outstanding success. This, together with the excellent reception given to the &#8216;Golden Guinea&#8217; records, has had a marked effect upon the gramophone industry as a whole.</p>
<p>Your Group&#8217;s British production subsidiary ITC-Incorporated Television Company Limited continues to make good progress, During the past year the number of commercial television stations throughout the world has more than doubled and we are now actively selling programmes in a continually expanding market. The series &#8216;Danger Man,&#8217; which is still under production Elstree, has been sold over the full Canadian network at a price higher than that previously paid for any similar series. Further series and pilot films are in the planning stage and will shortly commence production.</p>
<h2>Overseas Investments</h2>
<p>As regards investments overseas in the USA, Independent Television Corporation Inc., which, as at 30th April 1960, we held a 50% participation, has continued to handle the distribution of your Company&#8217;s film productions and has achieved a turnover of close to $10,000,000 <em>[$103m]</em>. During most of the period under review conditions have been particularly difficult, largely because of the increasing tendency by the three major television networks to assume an attitude of inflexibility towards programmes proposed by the independent producing companies. Recently, however, there have been signs of a slight improvement in business generally and your Board remains of the opinion that it is vital for the Group to have a direct outlet to the American market.</p>
<p>Since the end of the financial period under review we have purchased the balance of the share capital of Independent Television Corporation Inc. at a price which your Board regards as satisfactory. Having acquired control of the company we have taken steps to strengthen the management and to reduce the overheads of the operation and are confident that in time, and with adequate product available for distribution, this company should prove profitable to the Group. Nevertheless, in view of present uncertainties, you will see that your Board, as a measure of prudence, has set aside in the accounts before you a sum of £500,000 <em>[£9.5m]</em> to Investment Reserve. </p>
<p>In Canada your Company has purchased 25% (the maximum permitted under Canadian law for non-Canadian investors) of CJCH &#8211; the Halifax, Nova Scotia, radio station which has been awarded the licence for independent commercial television in that area.</p>
<p>The diversified interests of your wholly owned Australian subsidiary continue to prosper. Commercial radio in general is maintaining its level of profit and commercial television is expanding rapidly. The Sydney Commercial Television Station showing increasing profits and the Queensland and Adelaide Stations are rapidly advancing to profit-making stage. Altogether the Group&#8217;s television investments in Australia, which have a book value of nearly £250,000 <em>[£4.8m]</em>, have grown in value to a sum greatly in excess of the amount invested. Since the end of the financial period under review ATV (Australia) Pty. Limited has sold the Artransa studios and the film production side of the business to Station ATN, the Sydney Commercial Television Company, in which we hold 9.7% of the share capital. We have retained the profitable radio transcription side of the business.</p>
<h2>Level of Acceptability</h2>
<p>All these investments business at home and it should ancillary to the Company&#8217;s main be recognised that the success of forward in the accounts of the any independent television company must depend upon the degree of popular acceptance of its those programmes by those members of the British public whom it serves. Here, it is noteworthy to add that during the calendar year January to December 1959 the level of acceptability in London (where the weekday programmes are provided by another company) has been 69% against the BBC&#8217;s 31%, whereas in the Midlands (where Associated Television Limited has the five-day operation) during the same period the level of acceptability has been 74%, against the BBC&#8217;s 26%.</p>
<h2>Documentary and Religious Programmes</h2>
<p>Despite the fact that such popular productions as Mr. Val Parnell&#8217;s &#8216;Sunday Night at the London Palladium&#8217; have continued to occupy a high place in the &#8216;Top Ten,&#8217; your Company has been responsible also for such serious documentary programmes as &#8216;We Dissent&#8217;; &#8216;The Western&#8217; – an enquiry into the popularity of Western films; a medical programme, &#8216;Fear Begins at 40&#8217;: &#8216;The Art of Architecture&#8217;; the series of five lectures by Sir Kenneth Clark on &#8216;Revolutionary Painters&#8217;; the lectures on British Prime Ministers by Dr. A. J. P. Taylor; and the &#8216;Right to Reply&#8217; series in which Mr. William Clark interviewed among others, Mr. Selwyn Lloyd. Mr. Hugh Gaitskell, the late Aneurin Bevan, Father Trevor Huddleston, M. Jacques Soustelle, M. Hammarskjöld, the late John Foster Dulles, Mr. Krishna Menon, Mr. Henry Cabot Lodge, Mr. Paul Hoffman, and Mr. Norman Manley, Prime Minister of Jamaica.</p>
<p>It will be remembered that Associated Television Limited was the first company to introduce regular religious programmes in Sunday television and those who took part during the past year included their Graces the Archbishops of Canterbury and York, the Bishops of Kensington, Lincoln, Manchester, Woolwich and Bedford, the Roman Catholic Archbishop of Liverpool, Dr. Heenan, Dr. Donald Soper and Lord Woolton.</p>
<h2>Notable Achievements</h2>
<p>Notable also have been those series which, while serious in content, have nevertheless secured maximum audiences. The series &#8216;Emergency – Ward 10&#8217; has throughout the greater part of the year played to a weekly audience in excess of 20 million viewers. The new series &#8216;Probation Officer&#8217; has proved equally successful and has earned wide praise from social workers and the Church alike.</p>
<p>Among British companies, your own Company has maintained its lead in the field of international television film production. In addition to such series as &#8216;Four Just Men&#8217; and &#8216;Danger Man,&#8217; produced in this country, the Company is just completing a series, &#8216;Whiplash,&#8217; in Australia.</p>
<h2>Company&#8217;s Major Role</h2>
<p>Your Company has continued to play a major part in the independent television industry itself. Your Deputy Chairman, Mr. Norman Collins, has for the past year acted as Chairman of the Independent Television Companies Association and is currently also the Chairman of Independent Television News Limited, the company which provides the news bulletins for all stations. Mr. James Drummond, the Financial Director of your Company has for the past year acted Chairman of the General Purposes Committee of the Independent Television Companies Association. Mr. Bill Ward, Productions Controller of your Company, is the current Chairman of the Society of Film and Television Arts and I am pleased to place on record that he is the recipient of the Award of the Guild of Television Producers and Screenwriters for the best Light Entertainment Producer of 1959.</p>
<h2>The Industry&#8217;s Growth</h2>
<p>The television industry as a whole continues to grow and it is pleasing to note that during the year under review the ITA has appointed new companies to serve East Anglia and Northern Ireland and has erected a satellite station to give coverage to the Dover area.</p>
<p>By April 1960, 47,578,000 viewers were within reach of programmes broadcast from the ITA transmitters and the average total peak viewing audience for independent television is now over 13,000,000, compared with the BBC&#8217;s 5,500,000, as measured by TAM in homes with a choice of programmes.</p>
<p>Your Company&#8217;s operations have from the outset been divided between London and the English Midlands and the proportion of locally produced programmes in the Midlands is higher than that of any other independent company.</p>
<p>Your Company, nevertheless, continues to feel that an uninterrupted seven-day-a-week operation in any one area is calculated to provide the most satisfactory service to viewers, and your Company again places on record the fact that, in the public interest, it would welcome the introduction of new stations providing alternative services, so that genuine competition could be assured.</p>
<p>Relations with the Independent Television Authority, under its Chairman Sir Ivone Kirkpatrick, G.C.B., G.C.M.G., have been most closely maintained and I would like to express the gratitude of your Board and more particularly of the Executive Directors for the unfailing service rendered by the officers of the Authority at all levels</p>
<h2>Tribute to Management and Staff</h2>
<p>As in other years I would, as Chairman, like to pay tribute to the services rendered by the Management. Your Company&#8217;s Managing Director, Mr. Val Parnell, and your Deputy Managing Director, Mr. Lew Grade, have continued not only to shoulder the heavy responsibility of the manifold interests of the Company but have added to their other duties by arduous business missions abroad. In addition, non-Executive Directors have continued to render most valuable services to the Company. They have given generously of their time and I would like to express my thanks to them.  </p>
<p>Finally, I am happy to report that the Staff in all departments continue to reveal all those characteristics of enthusiasm  which have served to build up  the Company and I am sure the shareholders will wish to join me in thanking them for their loyal services rendered during the past year. It is gratifying that the Staff Profit-Sharing Scheme again enables the Company to show its appreciation of their efforts.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://associatedtelevision.network/company/reports/atv-financial-results-1960/">ATV financial results: 1960</a> appeared first on <a href="https://associatedtelevision.network">THIS IS ATV NETWORK from Transdiffusion</a>.</p>
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		<title>ATV financial results: 1959</title>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Chairman&#039;s Statement]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 02 Aug 2023 09:52:59 +0000</pubDate>
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		<category><![CDATA[JAL Drummond]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Leslie Caron]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lew Grade]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Prince Littler]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pye Records]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Richard L Mayer]]></category>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p>Prince Littler on Associated Television Limited's 1959 results</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://associatedtelevision.network/company/reports/atv-financial-results-1959/">ATV financial results: 1959</a> appeared first on <a href="https://associatedtelevision.network">THIS IS ATV NETWORK from Transdiffusion</a>.</p>
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										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-57to67.png"><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" src="https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-57to67.png" alt="Associated Television Limited" width="1170" height="299" class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-1982" srcset="https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-57to67.png 1170w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-57to67-300x77.png 300w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-57to67-768x196.png 768w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-57to67-1024x262.png 1024w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-57to67-720x184.png 720w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-57to67-675x173.png 675w" sizes="auto, (max-width: 1170px) 100vw, 1170px" /></a></p>
<h2>YEAR OF CONTINUED PROGRESS AND EXPANSION</h2>
<h2>OVER TWENTY-FOUR MILLION VIEWERS ON I.T.V.</h2>
<h2>SIGNIFICANT WIDENING OF PROGRAMME RANGE</h2>
<h2>MR. PRINCE LITTLER&#8217;S REVIEW OF ACTIVITIES</h2>
<p>The fourth annual general meeting of Associated Television Limited will be held at the Connaught Rooms, Great Queen Street, London, W.C.2., on Thursday, September 3rd, 1959, at 3 p.m.</p>
<p>The following is the statement by the chairman, Mr. Prince Littler, C.B.E. which has been circulated with the report and accounts:–</p>
<p><a href="https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-princelittler.jpg"><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" src="https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-princelittler-300x335.jpg" alt="Prince Littler" width="300" height="335" class="alignright size-medium wp-image-1986" srcset="https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-princelittler-300x335.jpg 300w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-princelittler-768x859.jpg 768w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-princelittler-337x377.jpg 337w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-princelittler-316x353.jpg 316w, https://associatedtelevision.network/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/results-princelittler.jpg 788w" sizes="auto, (max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px" /></a></p>
<p>The year under review has shown continued progress and expansion both for your Company and for Independent Television as a whole. New programme companies have been appointed for southern and north-eastern England, and the number of viewers able to receive Independent Television has risen to a total of more than 24 millions. Apart from the natural growth of the television audience through the purchase of new receivers, an entirely new Independent Television audience will arise from the opening of three new transmitters which will be on the air by the end of the year, thereby bringing Independent Television to an additional four million viewers in East Anglia. Northern Ireland and south-eastern England. All Independent Television companies, the pioneer companies as well as the newcomers, benefit from this expansion because network arrangements between the various companies enable basic production costs to be spread.</p>
<h2>Planned Expenditure by Advertisers</h2>
<p>With the nation-wide growth of Independent Television, advertisers are now able to be more selective in their buying of time, and the industry is entering into a new phase of overall planned expenditure on the part of the advertisers and their agencies. This is a thoroughly healthy development and it is supported by increased budgets which amply demonstrate the faith that advertisers have in the television medium.</p>
<p>While advertising revenue increased in the period under review as against the previous year, it must be recognized that saturation point may soon be reached. On the other hand programme costs continue to rise, both as a result of our confirmed policy of improving programme standards and as a result of wage increases arising from negotiations with the various trade unions concerned in the industry. Continuous watch is kept on expenditure and, although various substantial economies have been effected, the present extremely high level of profitability may become increasingly difficult to maintain.</p>
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<h2 class="results-banner">Transdiffusion analysis</h2>
<p>The financial portions of annual reports are always dry and, to 90% of the population, impenetrable. By the 1970s, ATV would get round this by publishing their annual report in two parts – one with all the balances and shareholder funds and dividend information than you can handily pop in the bin, and one full of pictures of the programmes and films and exciting bits that you can actually read.</p>
<p>But the financial part is worth looking into, especially this early into the life of the company.</p>
<p>One of the things we can divine here is that the company is now pretty well debt free. With all the cash coming in the door, it has made sense to pay off the mortgage on Elstree over a year early and take the financial penalty. The company&#8217;s loan stock – a way for shareholders to lend money to the business – has been bought back, with a tidy profit to those (Pye Group, notably) who bought it. They&#8217;ve also made sure that there&#8217;s no future way for creditors to call on the company by converting ATV&#8217;s piles of cash into shares. These are attractively priced and thus are very tempting to investors.</p>
<p>What isn&#8217;t made clear here is that these new shares are non-voting shares. Sure, you&#8217;ll own a slice of ATV, but you&#8217;ll get no say in the company beyond perhaps been called on to speak at the Annual General Meeting if you&#8217;re insistent enough. But the power remains with a selected group of original investors – and one of them in particular. Mr Lew Grade bet the farm on ATV and holds a large slice of the voting stock. The conversions in this report remove the voting powers of a number of early investors, but Lew isn&#8217;t one of them.</p>
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<h2>Capital Structure</h2>
<p>In the past 12 months there have been considerable changes in the capital structure of your Company. On September 30, 1958, the remaining £207,120 <em>[£3.9m in today&#8217;s money allowing for inflation – Ed]</em> of the 6 per cent. Convertible Unsecured Loan stock, 1960/63, was converted into “A” Ordinary shares of £1 each, but with a reduced right to dividends in respect of the year ended April 30, 1959, and the Company’s 6 per cent. Unsecured Loan stock, 1960/63, was redeemed at 102½ per cent.</p>
<p>On December 11, 1958, the authorized capital of the Company was increased to £5,000,000 <em>[£94m]</em> by the creation of 2,980,000 additional “A” Ordinary shares of £1 each, and 305,000 new “A” Ordinary shares of £1 each were issued credited as fully paid by way of capitalization of reserves and distributed to the holders of the Deferred shares and the 400,000 Deferred shares of 1s. each were converted into 20,000 “A” Ordinary shares of £1 each. On the same date each of the Company’s 4,850,000 “A” Ordinary shares of £1 was sub-divided into four “A” Ordinary shares of 5s. each.</p>
<p>On March 19, 1959, 7,871,520 fully paid “A” Ordinary shares of 5s. each numbered 1 to 7,871,520 inclusive were converted into stock transferable in amounts and multiples of 5s. The 828,480 “A” Ordinary shares of 5s. each, arising from the conversion of the Loan stock on September 30, 1958, will be converted into stock after the payment of the final dividend in respect of file year ended</p>
<p>April 30, 1959, at which time these shares will rank <em>pari passu</em> with the remaining “A” Ordinary stock.</p>
<h2>Group Profit and Dividend</h2>
<p>The Group profit before taxation, for the year ended April 30, 1959, amounted to £5,316,493 <em>[£100m]</em>. Taxation takes £2,715,076 <em>[£51.2m]</em> and there remains a Group profit of £2,601,417 <em>[£49m]</em>, of which £369 <em>[£7,000]</em> is attributable to outside shareholders of a subsidiary company, leaving a profit attributable to the parent company of £2,601,048. Of this amount £38,373 <em>[£724,000]</em> was retained by the subsidiary companies and there remains £2,562,675 <em>[£48.3m]</em> to be dealt with in the accounts of the parent company. To this must be added £333,040 <em>[£6.3m]</em>, the balance brought forward from the previous year, and £153,123 <em>[£2.9m]</em> in respect of taxation provisions no longer required due to the reduction in the rate of income tax, producing a balance of £3,048,838 <em>[£57.5m]</em> available for appropriation.</p>
<p>Your directors propose to recommend a final dividend of 12s. per share on the Ordinary shares of £1 each and 3s. per share on the “A” Ordinary stock units of 5s. each. &#8220;A&#8221; Ordinary shares numbered 7,871,521 to 8,700.000 inclusive rank for dividend of ⁷⁄₁₂ths of that payable on the “A” Ordinary stock. The interim dividend already paid and the proposed final dividend absorb £1,337,623 <em>[£25.2m]</em>, leaving £1,711,215 <em>[£32.3m]</em> to be carried forward in the accounts of the parent company.</p>
<p>The accounts include provision for the distribution of £213,897 <em>[£4m]</em> for the staff profit-sharing scheme.</p>
<p>The balance of the mortgage on National Studios was repaid in September, 1958.</p>
<h2>Proposed Capitalization of Reserves</h2>
<p>On February 5, 1959, your Company applied to the London Stock Exchange for a quotation of its “A” Ordinary share capital which was granted. In the statement submitted with the application your directors indicated their intention of recommending in December, 1959, the capitalization of £2,325,000 <em>[£43.9m]</em> of reserves by the issue of 9,300,000 “A” Ordinary shares of 5s. each credited as fully paid to the holders of the present issued share capital in the proportions of four new shares for each existing Ordinary share of £1 each and for every four existing “A” Ordinary stock units of 5s. each. It is still their intention to make this recommendation.</p>
<p>Last year you were notified of the acquisition at par by your Company of £500,000 <em>[£9.4m]</em> 7 per cent. Convertible Unsecured Loan stock, 1967/68, in British Relay Wireless and Television Limited under the terms of issue of which the Company has options, exercisable on September 30, 1961, or September 30, 1962, to convert the whole or part of the stock into fully paid Ordinary shares of 5s. at the rate of 134 shares for each £100 stock converted. In February, 1959, British Relay Wireless and Television Limited made a rights issue and your Company subscribed for 268,000 new Ordinary shares of 5s. at 20s. which was its entitlement under the terms of the Loan Stock Trust Deed. The operations of British Relay Wireless and Television Limited continue to expand and your board is confident that this investment will prove profitable.</p>
<h2>Recent and Proposed Acquisitions</h2>
<p>In September, 1958, your Company received the consent of the Australian Federal Government to the acquisition of file commercial radio and television interests of the Daily Mirror Group in Australia. In March, 1959, the wholly owned Australian holding company, formed by your Company to control its Australian interests, subscribed for 75,000 shares of £A.1 each in the company operating the new Brisbane commercial television station.</p>
<p>It is anticipated that this station will go on the air in August, 1959. The Sydney commercial television station in which your company has a 9.36 per cent interest, is now operating on increasingly profitable terms.</p>
<p>As I reported in my statement last year, your board was then negotiating for file acquisition of a prominent United Kingdom production company engaged in the production of films for television. These negotiations were successfully concluded last autumn when the share capital of Incorporated Television Programme Company Limited, which has since changed its name to ITC—Incorporated Television Company Limited, was acquired. This company owns a 50 per cent interest in the voting equity of one of the three most important television film distribution companies in the United States. Preparatory work for the production of television film series is in hand and will be carried out in your Company’s studios in the United Kingdom and also in its studios in Australia.</p>
<h2>Agreement with Pye Records</h2>
<p>As indicated in the statement accompanying the application for quotation to the London Stock Exchange, your Company has completed an agreement to buy for a nominal consideration, half of the issued share capital of Pye Records Limited, a gramophone record manufacturing company, and has undertaken to advance to Pye Records Limited up to £300,000 <em>[£5.7m]</em> by way of loan. Although it is anticipated that certain initial losses will be incurred, your directors are confident that this will prove a profitable venture.</p>
<p>The Company has also concluded its negotiations with Muzak Corporation. Subsidiary companies have now been formed to operate the concession acquired on a royalty basis in the United Kingdom and Ireland for the distribution of background music on the lines developed by Muzak Corporation in North America.</p>
<p>Preparatory development work is now in hand and a sales force is being built up to develop this franchise commencing in August of this year. An encouraging number of inquiries for the use of this service has been received and it is hoped that there will be a steady growth in demand once the operation is established.</p>
<h2>New Head Office and Studios</h2>
<p>The first stage of the transfer of the Company’s head office to its new office building at ATV House, 17, Great Cumberland Place, W.1, was.completed on June 29, 1959, and it is anticipated that the transfer of the second stage will be completed in the spring of 1960. These offices are among the most modem and efficiently planned in London and your Company has been able to set an example in providing such agreeable working conditions for its staff. The amenities include a Muzak service throughout the building.</p>
<p>Plans are currently under review for the Company’s permanent studios. From the outset the staff has been working under considerable difficulties in temporary accommodation converted to television production purposes and it is remarkable that programmes of such excellence should have been produced in the existing studios. The consolidation of the London production facilities has been consistently postponed until the Company’s financial position warranted the considerable expenditure involved. Plans have already been approved for the rebuilding of the Midlands centre, Alpha Studios, which are shared and jointly financed by ABC Television and ourselves.</p>
<h2>Distinguished Artists and Public Figures</h2>
<p>The range of ATV’s programming has significantly widened. During the past year not only have such distinguished artists as Sir Laurence Olivier, Sir John Gielgud and, more recently. Sir Michael Redgrave and Miss Leslie Caron, made their world debuts in major TV drama, but a succession of public figures, politicians, philosophers, scientists, educationalists, and the clergy of the main denominations, have all appeared in ATV’s various topical series. Thus, in “Right to Reply,” the speakers have included the late John Foster Dulles, the Right Hon. Selwyn Lloyd, Secretary for Foreign Affairs, Lord Russell, General Norstad, M. Soustelle and Mr. Aneurin Bevan. In “Free Speech,” Lord Boothby, Mr. Michael Foot, Mr. A. J. P. Taylor, Mr. W. J. Brown, to name four of the regular debaters, have kept the conduct of current controversy not merely balanced but also bold. Sir Kenneth Clark’s series “Is Art Necessary?” has now reached its eleventh programme and, in the field of documentary studies, ATV’s treatment of such subjects as Polio and World Population have achieved audiences in excess of five and a half million. The Religious programmes, moreover, have grown in audience from an average of under three million in 1958 to an average of nearly four and a half million in 1959. Among the many outstanding religious figures who have taken part in the “About Religion” series are the Reverend Father Trevor Huddleston, the Most Reverend Archbishop of Liverpool, Dr. John C. Heenan, and, more recently. Dr. Billy Graham, the American evangelist.</p>
<p>Popular science has been most successfully presented by Mr. Gerald Leach, a 26-year-old Cambridge scientist, who, in the series “It Can Happen Tomorrow” now addresses the largest home schoolroom audience of children and adults in British television.</p>
<h2>A Notable Outside Broadcast</h2>
<p>Notable among the many outside broadcasts was the first coverage in Independent Television of polo, with H.R.H. the Duke of Edinburgh playing at Windsor Great Park. Not less notable in another context is “Emergency – Ward 10” which has now entered its third year of twice-weekly series, with more than 10 million viewers for each episode.</p>
<p>Undoubtedly, however, the outstanding ATV record belongs to “Sunday Night at the London Palladium,” which on March 29, 1959, celebrated its 139th performance, having appeared no less than 130 times among the Top Ten most popular programmes in this country. “Sunday Night at the London Palladium” has brought into the homes of nearly 12 million viewers the best in light entertainment and, together with “Saturday Spectacular” has presented such internationally famous stars as Arthur Askey, Max Bygraves, Margot Fonteyn, Bruce Forsyth, Benny Hill, Bob Hope, Sally Ann Howes, Jewell and Warriss, Dave King, Liberace, Johnny Ray, Harry Secombe, Jo Stafford, Sophie Tucker and Norman Wisdom.</p>
<p>Recognizing the importance of maintaining the highest standards in children’s programmes your Company, in association with ABC Television, has appointed Miss Mary Field as Childrens Adviser. The work that Miss Field has already done as chairman of the Children’s Film Foundation earned her unique authority in this field.</p>
<h2>The Midlands</h2>
<p>Your Company is unique among the main Programme Companies in having responsibility not only for week-end broadcasting in the Metropolis but also for providing the week-day Independent Television for some six million inhabitants in the Midlands. In this important Midlands operation not only do we broadcast regular programmes for the farming community but, in the series “Where Are You Going?&#8217; the Midland teenagers are helped by Midland educationalists and by the large industrial organizations in arriving at the right choice of career. The Midlands programmes include the popular &#8220;Lunch Box” programme of Noele Gordon&#8217;s and many programmes not seen on the London screens. The latter include the daily “Midlands News”; “Midland Montage,&#8221; the weekly magazine-type programme which presents news, views and comment about the Midland scene; daily religious programmes; “Paper Talk,” the regular discussion programme which had the longest run of any weekly television senes in Britain; and “Cover Girl,” a new type of teenage show produced in ATV’s Midland studios.</p>
<p>Your Company has continued with its policy of publishing in pamphlet and booklet form various of its outstanding television programmes. Particularly notable is the fact that by adopting new techniques we were able to place the text of the broadcasts of Mr. Dulles. Mr. Selwyn Lloyd, General Norstad and M. Soustelle in the hands of Members of the House of Lords, M.P.s and newspaper editors on the morning following the broadcast.</p>
<p>Your Company during the past year contributed £26,000 <em>[£491,000]</em> out of the total of £100,000 <em>[£1.9m]</em> from the four main companies by way of grants to the arts and sciences. Sir Ivone Kirkpatrick, chairman of the Independent Television Authority, said of these grants: “The money will rescue many a valuable enterprise from extinction and will help others to improve their standards.”</p>
<h2>Competition Welcomed </h2>
<p>In my last statement I referred to the fact that this Company would welcome competition by another Independent Company seeking to attract viewers on the same days of the week and in the same areas. I reaffirm this view. Indeed, I feel that the competitive requirements of the Act call for such a second service. Moreover, your Company feels that the present restrictions on broadcasting hours are unrealistic and should be reviewed. The Company is at the moment precluded, solely by lack of opportunity, from scheduling many new programmes which it would like to be able to present to the British public. Furthermore, your Company has always been in the forefront of those which have supported the view that British television should progressively adopt the 625-line Continental standard and should not be permanently shackled to the outmoded standard of 405-lines to which this country reverted after the close of World War II.</p>
<p>The problems confronting any Programme Company are many and various and, once again, I should express our sincere appreciation for the invaluable guidance and advice always made readily available to us by Sir Ivone Kirkpatrick himself and by his two chief officers, the Director-General, Sir Robert Fraser, and the Deputy Director-General, Mr. Bernard Sendall.</p>
<p>The thanks of this Company, as of the other Independent Television Companies, are due also to Mr. Paul Adorian, managing director of Associated-Rediffusion, who for the past year has acted as chairman of the Independent Television Companies Association, an office in which he has from July 1 been succeeded by Mr. Norman Collins, deputy chairman of your own Company.</p>
<p>I have to report the resignation as executive director of Mr. Richard L. Meyer, whose wide experience of sound broadcasting matters proved so valuable to the Company during its initial stages. Mr. Meyer has been succeeded as an executive director by Mr. J. A. L. Drummond, whose City background and knowledge of financial matters has already proved of the greatest possible benefit to the board.</p>
<h2>Tribute to Management</h2>
<p>It is customary for the chairman to pay a tribute to the services rendered by the management. This I am most happy to do. I would like to thank all the directors, not least the non-executive directors, who have so generously given of their time and services.</p>
<p>No tribute to management would, however, be complete without a specific reference to the unique services rendered by your Company’s managing director, Mr. Val Parnell, thanks to whom the Company has not only become highly profitable but has laid sound foundations for the future. Moreover, Mr. Parnell, no less than I, would, I am sure, wish to include a special mention of your deputy managing director. Mr. Lew Grade, on whose shoulders fall so much of the detail of the day to day running of the business.</p>
<p>In conclusion, as regards the staff of your own Company, it will be apparent that such excellent results could not have been achieved without arduous and unflagging efforts on the part of all concerned. I therefore extend to them our heartiest thanks, and I am glad that the staff profit-sharing scheme enables our appreciation to take a tangible form.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://associatedtelevision.network/company/reports/atv-financial-results-1959/">ATV financial results: 1959</a> appeared first on <a href="https://associatedtelevision.network">THIS IS ATV NETWORK from Transdiffusion</a>.</p>
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