AdMedia Partners, Inc. · New York, NY United States
Company Description
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If you're in advertising or media, AdMedia Partners wants to be your investment bank. The firm provides M&A advisory, valuation, and strategice consulting services for media, marketing, and information companies. It specializes in both traditional and new media. The company has completed transactions worth more than $6 billion in the past 10 years, including the acquisitions of multimedia company Working Mother Media and ad agency Mr. Youth . AdMedia Partners was founded in 1990 by former media and financial executives, including managing directors Rob Garrett and Abe Jones. To read the full description, subscribe now.
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Key AdMedia Partners, Inc. Financials
| Company Type | Private Single Location |
| Fiscal Year-End | December |
| Annual Sales (mil.) | $2.0 |
| Employees | 18 |
AdMedia Partners, Inc. Executives
8 executives listed for AdMedia Partners, Inc.'s New York, NY location.
| Title | Name & Bio | Contact |
| Partner and Managing Director | Seth Alpert | Network |
| Partner and Managing Director | Gregory Smith | Network |
| VP Business Development | Polly Johnson | Network |
Competition
Competitive Landscape for AdMedia Partners, Inc.
Demand is driven by economic activity that results in company mergers, acquisitions, or public financing. The profitability of an investment bank depends on its ability to accurately assess both the value of a business transaction and the readiness of the market to buy the attendant debt or equity. Big firms have an advantage because large customer transactions require firms with substantial financial resources. Small investment banks can compete by participating in syndications and operating in regional markets or specialized industries. Although labor-intensive, the industry produces very high value: average annual revenue per employee at large firms is under $1 million. The global financial crisis of 2008-2009 dramatically altered the landscape of the investment banking industry. Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs, the only large firms still intact, have changed their status from investment banks to bank-holding companies. Both firms still engage primarily in investment banking, but former industry leaders such as Bear Stearns, Merrill Lynch, and Lehman Brothers have either been acquired or have filed for bankruptcy protection. The demise of these firms and the late 2000s recession have likely ushered in a new era in which the creation of innovative but risky financial instruments will be replaced by more traditional banking services. The new environment also means more industry oversight by the federal government, which had to step in and bail out dozens of financial services firms with billions of dollars of taxpayers' money. To read the full description, subscribe now.Top AdMedia Partners, Inc. Competitors
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