Good morning, everyone, and welcome to Sanoma's first half 2022 results presentation. My name is Kaisa Uurasmaa. I'm heading Investor Relations and Sustainability at Sanoma. Today, we have President and CEO Susan Duinhoven and CFO Alex Green presenting the results. After the presentation, we will have a Q&A session, and we will first start with questions from here at Sanoma House and then hand over to the telephone line. In addition, you can also use the chat function on the webcast. This event will be recorded, and the recording will be available on our website soon after the event, and it includes also the Q&A session. With this short introduction, I would like to hand over to Susan to start the presentation. Please.
Well, thank you very much, Kaisa, and also from my end, ladies and gentlemen, a warm welcome to this first half of the year 2022 reporting. If we look at the first half, we see that net sales grew and our operational EBIT was lower than last year due to the shift into Q3 in Spain. Overall, with all the shifts that are typical, I would say, to a learning business, and certainly a growing learning business, the full year 2022 outlook remains unchanged. If we look into the details of the figures, you see that the net sales landed on EUR 524 million, up from EUR 530 million last year. That means a comparable net sales growth of around 2% this year.
The net sales was stable in Learning and grew in Media Finland, and that was driven by the events business. If we then look at the operational EBIT excluding PPA, that came to EUR 43 million, down from EUR 55 million last year. That was mainly due to the late decisions from the local regional governments that lead to later production and then also later deliveries in Spain. There, it's good to remind that in Spain, the school start is only mid-September. At a quarter end of June is still early in the Spanish season. If we then look at the free cash flow, minus EUR 99 million, typical low and negative at the end of the Q2 .
This year, exceptionally low, and that followed the lower earnings and the related changes in working capital, where the payments are, of course, also later when you deliver late. In addition, there was the impact from the higher investments that we already announced in February and the more unusually low comparable from last year, where last year the bonus payments were due to the Corona year 2020 were exceptionally low. If we then look at the leverage, that is at its annual peak at the end of Q2, was 3.2 compared to 3.1 last year. Modest change, and a bit above our long-term target, but that is quite usual for the mid of the year.
During the second half of the year, you then see that leverage going down very rapidly. Now, in the Q2 , we also announced the acquisition of Pearson Italy and Pearson Germany, and the closing of that acquisition is expected later in the Q3 . All in all, with all the shifts and back and forth between the different quarters, as I say, a bit typical to a learning business, the outlook for 2022 as a whole remains unchanged. If we then look into Learning in a bit more detail and starting with revenues, we see there stable revenues overall for the first half of the year, but with quite some variations between the countries.
In Belgium, in Finland, in the Netherlands, you saw an increase, a number of factors, earlier ordering there, a bit earlier in the year, but also supported by growing market demand. We think that there will be continuous growth as we have also seen in the last couple of years. Increasing digital sales, which means that more of the revenues is recognized throughout the year, so also before the school start in the first half. In Poland, we saw an increase in net sales where we predict and have indicated before for the full year lower sales. Here in the first half, there was a bit higher sales due to earlier ordering. That is for exactly the reverse reason as in Spain.
In Poland last year, there was a curriculum change, which typically leads to a bit later deliveries. This year, no curriculum change, so a bit earlier ordering and deliveries. Coming to Spain, some in the press are now calling it a problem child. That is absolutely not the case. It's actually a very attractive and massive market with very solid profitabilities. Curriculum changes are always a bit of a topic. The core of the business is that you need to work there with the regional governments. In Spain, the complexity there is you have 17 regional governments that each one of them can take their own decision. What we saw was that decision-taking went quite slow and took quite long and late in the year.
That also means that we could only finalize the books and the digital applications late in the year, printing later, and therefore also delivery later. As I say, full year in Spain will still show solid growth for the full year 2022, but coming in later. School starts mid-September. Most of it will move into Q3. Some of it might even move a bit into Q4, that is all part of the Learning business, and I would say part of the game we're playing. 12 out of 17 regions have still, so that number has not changed, indicated that they will implement the new curriculum. What you do see is that sometimes they choose a slightly lower number of subjects.
That is where the overall growth in 2022 will be also moving a little bit into 2023. Spain will grow as a whole, but a little bit less than all of us might have expected. Some provinces you see even see some indication of postponement into 2024. Now, for us, that is not an issue when it happens, but it is good to realize that all the cost for the preparation you do, of course, upfront, and you are fully ready to get that approval from the regional government, so all the costs have been made. That is then the lead into the profitability, while the earnings have been impacted so much due to that shift in sales in Spain.
Because in actuality, it is a shift in sales, plus of course, an increase in the cost in the preparation of the curriculum. Overall, for the whole of Learning, operational EBIT came to EUR 21 million from EUR 29 million last year. There you see that the shift in sales and the higher marketing and sales spend in Spain, ahead of the deliveries, have been partially compensated by the increase in earnings in the other territories. That increase in earnings in the other territories was of course, sales driven. Sales growth has led there to higher earnings, even with higher paper costs that we indicated at the start of the year to impact us both in Learning and in Media this year. Now, overall, in Poland, we had of course a little bit reverse.
In all fairness there, last year there was a smaller curriculum change, but that did create marketing and sales cost in the Polish market that we didn't have this year because this year Poland is without curriculum change. That created also a little bit of that uplift in earnings in the other markets. All in all, you see quite a bit of shift between the quarters, had different stories for each of the markets. All in all, for the whole of 2022, we see good growth on the sales side and on the earnings side. If we then go to Media Finland, there the net sales grew with slightly lower profitability. Here we're reporting the Q2 , so not the first half.
Q2 net sales grew to EUR 164 million from EUR 154 million last year. That growth predominantly came from the events business that added EUR 8 million in sales to the total. If we look at the advertising sales, that was stable and in line with the market development. We saw digital and radio grow quite nicely and print and TV advertising declined. TV advertising for us, the Q2 is always a difficult quarter because our competitor has the world championship in ice hockey. Certainly, this year, that was of course quite a crowd pleaser with the performance of the Finnish team. In addition, Q2 was of course quite a heavy news quarter, and that is also leading viewers to our competitor's channels.
Q2 is for us in advertising, in TV viewing and therefore also advertising, always a bit of a challenge. That was not a real surprise. Subscription sales were stable, but there we do see that at the end of the quarter, we do see a slight trending downward, and that will carry into the second half of the year. We attribute that quite logically to the strong growth that we have seen during the Corona period, but also the fact that consumers are expected to be a bit more cost conscious, and what we also think in the second half of the year, given the increase in energy prices and inflation. All in all, growth in net sales, but a decline in operational EBIT.
That was largely due to the increase in paper cost that were not mitigated as we had hoped by the profitability in the events. Because unfortunately, we did have additional sales from the events last year, but we did not have additional profit, and that was due to lower than expected number of visitors for the festivals. It's something that we see throughout the whole of the market. The whole of the industry is experiencing this increased competition. A lot of people starting up first-time festivals, and then also still corona creating that people were during the summertime more careful than we had anticipated before. Unfortunately, now with the majority of July behind us already, I also need to say that that performance has not improved in July.
For the full year, for the full festival season, we expect additional sales, but we do not expect additional profitability. That is, of course, a disappointment, because when I spoke to you in April, we did not forecast. We had hoped for an exuberant festival season, as everyone in the industry did. That's Media Finland. Solid performance, stable advertising, stable subscription, festival season has not gone as we had liked. Overall outlook for the whole of the group, 2022, unchanged. That means that we expect to be reporting net sales between EUR 1.25 billion and EUR 1.3 billion, and that the group operational EBIT margin, excluding PPA, will be between 15% and 16%.
For that, we then assume that the continuing coronavirus pandemic will not have a significant impact on our business, also not in the second half of the year, and that the advertising market in Finland will be stable. Now, in the Q2 , we also announced a next acquisition, and we're very happy with that fact. We announced on the seventh of June that we will acquire the Italian and German business from Pearson. With that, we will enter Italy, which is one of the largest K-12 learning markets in Europe. The acquisition also contains a small exam preparation business in Germany.
Overall, that acquisition will add over EUR 100 million to the group's overall sales if you do that on a pro forma basis for 2021, and that would bring the total sales of the group to EUR 1.4 billion, of which 55% is then coming from learning. The EV of this business is EUR 190 million, and we then paid an EBITDA multiple of 7.2 when we include the integration cost and the investments in digital development that we foresee for the Italian business. Now, since that moment, we have gotten the confirmation that no filing under the Golden Power rule in Italy is required.
With that, all the regulatory conditions have been fulfilled, and we therefore expect closing of the transaction later in the Q3 , when Pearson has done its pre-closing restructuring of the business, where they take out the non-K-12 parts that they will retain. In addition, in June, we also announced the strategic growth ambition for the group. That was specifically on the net sales for 2030. There we indicate that we aim to be over EUR 2 billion in total net sales, of which at least 75% of that will be coming from the learning business. Of course, round numbers as it goes with these sorts of strategic ambitions .
An important thing, realizing that after the Pearson acquisition, we would be on a pro forma basis EUR 1.4 billion, so significant growth coming in the coming years. The key levers for that growth are of course organic growth, where we indicate for the learning business 2 to 5% annual growth, but also continued acquisitions. We see a solid pipeline that we will want to utilize, and we aim to combine those acquisitions with paying an increasing dividend, as we have done in the last years. That would mean that in order to stay within our leverage target of being below 3.0, at some point, we might also consider equity as a way of funding that growth further.
That is, of course, only if it is beneficial for all shareholders. With that, I would like to round off my part of the presentation on the first half and hand over to Alex Green for the more details on the financials. Alex.
Thank you, Susan. Wonderful to be here again with you. Looking at the financials and let's start with operational EBIT on the next slide. As Susan has talked about, operational EBIT is lower in Q2 versus last year, and this is primarily coming from the learning business. Whereas we had net sales growth in the Netherlands, Belgium, Finland, and Poland, partly to do with the digitalization spreading through the year, partly to do with the early sales from Poland, this is more than offset by the lower sales in Spain with the shift in earnings more towards July and August.
In addition to that, what hits EBIT is the high marketing and other fixed costs that we see that we've put in Spain in order to get ready for this curriculum change and LOMLOE. Also, we have the higher paper costs, which we've talked about before, which affect both Learning and Media Finland. Across the board in Learning, we do have to see the higher paper costs in Q2. In Learning, it will be Q2 and Q3 primarily. In Media Finland, you can see that the EUR 2 million is also primarily the higher paper costs impacting the profitability there. In terms of the other and elimination line, if you remember in Q1, we talked about lower technology costs due to phasing differences with the previous year. Here we see that coming back with more technology costs in Q2.
On this line for a full-year basis, we expect this to be in line with last year. If I move to free cash flow, as we saw, -EUR 99 million, which is quite a bit below last year, but it's due to four very specific reasons, all of which have a relatively similar impact in total. Firstly, the lower EBITDA, as we've talked about, primarily coming from the shift of sales in Spain. Also, the higher net working capital, which is primarily coming from higher receivables with on average sales being later in the quarter than in the previous year.
We talked earlier on about earlier in the year about our higher investments in digital development and also in office adaptation as we've done some office renovations to move our offices to be more fitting to the new way of working. We have this bonus impact where the bonus we paid in 2022 relates to a successful 2021 year, whereas the one we paid last year related to a Corona impacted 2020, where the bonuses were much less. All those four things are contributing to that impact. As we talked about earlier this year, we expected free cash flow to decline slightly on a full year basis. We still have that same guidance in terms of free cash flow.
Not guidance, but you know, a view. This is declining slightly due to the investments we talked about, and the bonus has an impact there as well. As Susan talked about the acquisition of Pearson Italy and Pearson Germany, and that will add free cash flow in 2022. As a reminder there, our second installment or equal installment of our dividend will be paid in November. If we look at the balance sheet, our balance sheet key metrics here are impacted typically seasonally, and you can see that here as well. Our net debt over adjusted EBITDA figure at 3.2 is at its highest point.
That will come back down towards the end of the year back into our long-term range of 3. Our interest-bearing net debt being very similar to last year at EUR 771 million. Our equity ratio again is lower than the range that we our sort of long-term range of 35 to 45%. Again, same reasons, and we'll see that coming back up as we go into the back half of the year. Within net financial items, we do have a one-off in there which takes the amount to zero.
This is a one-off impact of EUR 3 million, which relates to the valuations or the revaluations we do of our liabilities related to earlier M&As and to do with earn-outs and the element of some of the M&As where we haven't taken a 100% stake. We've left 20% or 30%, for example, with the management and we then regularly review the valuations of those liabilities related to the earn-outs of that and update it. But outside that one-off, the underlying interest expense is stable and at previous year's levels. As announced in June, we have the funding for the Pearson acquisition in place and signed and ready to go for close. That's the three slides I have on the financials.
The next report on the 27th of October for Q3. With that, I will hand back to Kaisa, who will lead us through the Q&A session.
Click once more. Thank you, Alex. Thank you, Susan. We will now start the Q&A session from here at Sanoma House. Please wait for the microphone before you ask your question. The first question comes from Maria from SEB. Please.
Thank you.
Yes, I have a few questions, which one is the paper costs, which you mentioned quite a few times on the presentation as well, and little bit getting a view that your contract length, because as my understanding, the newsprint prices have been heading further up. Wanting to see that, I mean, when is this impact then coming into your P&L? You kind of like when do we see the next price increases in your books? Then little bit more on the magnitude, as in the beginning of the year you said we talked about EUR 10 million, and now you have said it's more than EUR 10 million. What is the magnitude we are looking now for the full year?
Yeah. Maybe just to comment briefly on the contract lengths. Typically in the industry at this moment, everyone would of course like to go for longer contract lengths, but that is a part of the negotiation between the paper mills and the clients. It's typically on a quarterly basis. That doesn't mean that you cannot take in stocks. You do of course stock up appropriate to where you see the trends. The visibility on if this is going further up or will be going down is hard to say.
It is a bit of a gamble, to be honest, because we have had, of course, at the start of the year, we had the shortage in supply due to the strike also here at UPM in Finland. Now we see that the gas supply to Central Europe might impact the availability of, you know, operations in the paper mills in Central Europe. Those are the balancing factors. The strike is gone, but will the paper mills in Central Europe be able to continue on full capacity? That is what we balance on a constant basis. Those views with a procurement team that is specialized in that and then we take positions both from a length of contract, but also from a stock perspective.
If you say, you know, the 10, yes, it will be higher. How much higher for the full year depends very much on these price developments. It is good to realize that we have also, in the first half of the year, mitigated some of those price increases by, for example, lower usage. We have taken action to reduce usage to be more efficient, to take out some of the. You know, you might have noticed it, the TV listings out of the paper. Elements that are not journalistic content and less used in general. Those are the mitigations.
Maybe here a little bit of follow-up as well, I mean, on the mitigations. You mentioned that you cut the number of pages that you print. Do you think, I mean, there is possibility to increase the subscription prices from here, especially now when the whole consumer sentiment is deteriorating? Would you see that, I mean, could perhaps, I mean, this kind of weaker consumer environment lead to more subscription being transferred to, I mean, purely digital, which are of course much cheaper for the consumer, and how would this impact on your numbers on the bottom line?
Yeah. The good thing about that is, the answer to that is yes, and we see that trend. In all fairness, it's been a trend already over the last years that we have seen that conversion from print to digital. You see digital growing faster, let's say, than the total number of subscriptions, that conversion is taking place. We do expect that it will enhance due to the fact that exactly as you indicated, the cost to the consumer is less from a digital-only perspective. The good thing for us is that the profitability from an incremental digital subscriber is actually higher than the profitability of a hybrid or a print subscriber.
That is exactly through the fact that printing the paper, but let's not forget the distribution because that's a very significant cost component in the total chain, for a paper product is much higher. Therefore, our profitability goes up. Our top line will go down because it does impact, of course, our top line, just as it is more advantageous for the consumer, but the profitability is higher. This is where that conversion to digital is something that from our perspective, there is nothing that hinders us or holds us back to do so. We do see that consumers really appreciate a printed product and are therefore willing to pay a slightly higher price for it. That is what will happen. Of course, we do this with care. We mitigate also through price increases.
It's exactly as you're saying, in a sentiment in the market where consumers are hit with many price increases, we need to do that carefully. This is where we have teams that do nothing but price research, do consumer research to see what is, what is still acceptable and where does it become no longer acceptable.
Final question at this stage is just a little bit understanding the profitability in the Spanish business. I mean, if more of these orders will be shifted next year, and obviously, I think most of the cost associated to renewing the materials or the editorial content, I mean, have already been taken this year. What, like what magnitude of the cost we are talking about that basically you get sales next year, but you don't take this or the cost of making these materials have already been taken this year. To get little bit the shift that how much higher should we look at the profits next year versus this year?
We typically don't go into profits by country. What we have indicated before, and that still applies, is that we say the first year of a curriculum change does not improve the profitability as a percentage in any way. We have pre-warned a little bit last year, you know, for the phenomena that you make quite a bit of these marketing and sales cost and some of these editorial costs , you make them ahead of the sales. That is where the first year in a curriculum change, and this is nothing specific about Spain. It was exactly the same in Poland a couple of years ago.
That we have forgotten, because then we have benefited from those last years in Poland, where, of course, we benefited from the curriculum change and the increase in sales and no longer saw the cost of it in the beginning. This is a typical phenomenon of these curriculum changes. Costs go up front. First year does have growth. We do expect in absolute terms a profitability higher than last year in Spain, but not to the extent as you will have in the later years. That's a bit the phenomenon in the learning market, and I fully appreciate the complexity that you have to do this market by market without these data. It, you know.
The fact is, of course, that if this happens, in all honesty, in the Swedish market, you don't see it that much. Now we're in these large markets with sizable curriculum changes from a magnitude perspective, so now you really notice it.
Yes, thank you.
Further questions from here. Sanna from Nordea, please.
Yeah, hi. I'm continuing with Spain. Could you just clarify a little bit of the phasing? So, the sales decline in Spain in Q2, how much of that we'll realize in Q3 or will some of that realize, like, later, maybe next year, or how should I interpret that?
Yes, as you know, the curriculum change in Spain is, well, originally was going to be over 2022 and 2023. We now know that at least one of the regions, it will actually go into 2020, 2024, so it was always spread over that period. What we see here in this delay is more local government sort of slowness in getting their act together and making the orders, so the orders flip back. In a full year basis, we still expect significant growth in Spain. When I say significant, I mean, you know, normally we talk about 2 to 5% as our sort of normal growth. It's higher than that and, you know, say low double- digit growth in Spain.
We will still get a decent significant growth in Spain, sort of highlighting the shift from Q2 to Q3. Again, the overall impact of the curriculum change will be 2023 and 2024 as well. Versus our initial view, it's a little bit more weighted to the 2023 than we'd originally seen, but still very valuable to this year as well.
Thank you. I was just wondering if there is a risk of this kind of phasing, large phasing differences in the future as well, like next year, maybe?
See, cause as Susan said earlier, the school starts in mid-September, so that you have a natural kind of point to focus on, and then you flip to the next year. I think in terms of next year, I mean, there's always a certain uncertainty around the political situation and elections and things there. We strongly believe that the next substantial amount will happen in 2023 and a bit in 2024, as we say. We're sort of following very closely, obviously, the different regions and the different parts of Spain.
The honest truth is that these changes between the quarters, they can always happen. I think everyone who has followed us, you know, knows that it's a little bit of a theme that we have, these shifts between quarters. The good thing is the school starts, and at some point, the books need to be there, and that is where, you know, it all comes together. All these in between quarters, for a school, it doesn't mean anything. Q1 has no meaning for a school in that ordering process, and Q2 doesn't have either.
What is important for them is when does the school year finish, because then they need to have the orders done, because then the teachers go on holiday, and then the books need to be delivered once they come back. That's the only two solid things for them. That's why our reporting is completely unaligned to the operational process, unfortunately.
Yeah. Thank you. That clarified. A little bit on Media Finland and the events. Was there anything else, maybe on the cost side, that surprised you regarding the events? It was only the lower number of visitors.
It's lower number. We have executed the reviews out of it, so the enthusiasm from the people that visited was very good. Let's also say, you know, it is the unfortunate thing of course, quite a fixed cost business, that once you commit yourself to a certain number of visitors, if they then don't show up, your cost base has been targeted for that visitor number. The visitors in the first quarter of the season, so in June, it was only 5% below 2019. It was quite a bit more behind what we thought we would get in our, you know, combined enthusiasm.
Thank you. That's all for me.
Okay.
Thank you. We hand over to Piia from Carnegie, please.
Hi. Thank you. A big focus on the Media Finland business. We discussed the paper prices. Let me just check my questions here. The downward trend in subscriptions. I think the subscriptions declined by 1% during the first half. You expect this trend to kind of accelerate in the second half. Am I correct? Or just continue on the-
Continue on.
Yeah. Okay.
Yeah.
The change, is it really kind of subscribers, you know, ending their subscriptions, so not renewing their subscriptions? Or is it just, you know, not gaining-
Yeah
Traction from new?
It is, it's more the latter than the former, so it's more the new subscribers that is more difficult to get them in. Typically, the churn in our subscriptions, when I talk Helsingin Sanomat, is very low. If you talk the more digital, the Ruutu+ and the Supla+, those are high churn type of products, so there the churn is very significant. Small changes in that churn and small changes in the new sales can create quite some difference. I must say that Ruutu+ and Supla+ have still grown. Over the first half of the year, and less so than in the previous years which were corona-driven, you know, double-digit, you know, 20+ type of growth levels.
That we don't see anymore, but we still see very significant growth in those.
Okay, thanks. Still continuing on, there has been a lot of focus, of course, on learning, but looking at Media Finland maybe from a strategic point of view, so are there any reason for you to reconsider your commitment to the TV business or the events business in Finland given the recent developments?
Yeah, I think we are happy with the portfolio that we have at this moment. On a regular basis, we consider all elements of the portfolio, and definitely, you know, the festival season has not even finished, but once that has finished, we definitely will evaluate and also within the festival portfolio look at, you know, is there pruning needed? Are there some festivals that do not perform the way we thought? Because now we have a year of experience post-corona. It sounds a bit like a generic thing to say, but the world has changed, so people do act in a different way. We will be analyzing that in quite some detail and then look within the festival portfolio but also within the overall SMF portfolio.
Definitely, that is on a continuing basis the case.
Okay, thank you. Finally, looking at the guidance, the lower end and the upper end of your guidance for this year. Can you please share your thoughts on what could take your sales and earnings to closer to the upper end of the guidance?
Yeah. I think in all realism at this moment, I think the sales, you know, that is very much in line this year in total. I think if you look at the EBIT guidance, we are on the lower end of it. We're not at the higher end, and I don't think that there are realistic scenarios. I mean, we can all daydream, but there are realistic scenarios that will bring us to the full 16%.
Okay. Clear. Thank you. Thank you, Piia. We hand over to Petri from Inderes, please.
Thank you. Just to continue on Sanoma Media Finland, thinking about the trend you mentioned in the subscription, are you thinking of putting more money into marketing to gain traction, or are you thinking of just wait and see how the consumer survives?
Yeah. Those are things that you can hardly say generically because in some segments we will definitely invest more in order to get more subscribers. Other segments, you might diminish. This is a very detailed segment-by-segment type of decisions that you have to take. That is not able to answer that on a generic basis. It is true that in you know, more challenging circumstances, you then look, you re-segment, you look at what the pricing, what the marketing investments, what the support also is in order to minimize churn. It's all those components that you constantly work with.
That's where we have really a truly expert team at work to do that, of which I'm, I must say, also very proud of how they have performed in the first half.
Thinking about advertising, can you just comment on your expectations more on the second half? I mean, the
Yeah
The economic situation has changed quite a lot.
Yeah
last few months.
Yeah.
What are you seeing currently there?
Yeah. You know, the interesting thing and the good thing in the Finnish economy is that we see still quite a good advertising market. You've seen the market figures, modest growth overall, coming from the sort of coming back of the segments that we are typically not active in, the outdoor and the cinema. Still, advertisers therefore spending net more money than last year. We are actually seeing, till this moment, a good trend. We know that the visibility on longer term advertising trends is, you know, it's basically impossible to forecast that. So far, I must say we are quite comfortable, and we see companies being quite active, in using marketing also as they should.
Using marketing as a way to grow, specifically under circumstances where the consumers are going to be more picky and choosy, let's say, with where to spend their money. That's the invite that I also have to the Finnish advertisers, like, you know, use the advertising as a tool to continue growing in more difficult economic circumstances. You know, we're hopeful but can't make any promises.
Sure. On the festival business, is it fair to assume that, on a profitability basis, it's gonna be more like break even this year?
Yeah.
Can you just remind us how would that mean as a delta from last year?
Well, as a delta from last year, it will be, I think, at the same level. You know, it's break even. It depends now very much, I must say, on July. We have still a couple of festivals to go. We are currently organizing festivals, so you know, we're not yet done. These things can also, you know, if the last concerts or the last festivals go very well, you know, that can turn. It's a bit early, but I would say, you know, keep it in the mindset as not the comeback to 2019 that we had all expected. The comeback might be nearly there on the revenue side, but on the profitability side not, and therefore on our margin side it does give some pressure.
One more on Learning. Given what you see in Spain now, can you just comment on what are your expectations in terms of growth rate in Spain, this year and then next year? How is the growth prospects?
We expect low double-digit growth in net sales in Spain this year, which is, you know, substantially more than sort of the normal thing. As we said, the curriculum is split between two and then going into the third year, we would expect some significant growth also next year as well.
Thank you.
Thank you. I would like to remind you that you can also use the chat function on the webcast platform to ask questions. If no further questions from the audience at Sanoma House this time, I would like to hand over to the telephone operator for questions, please.
Thank you. We have a question from the line of Sami Sarkamies from Danske Bank. Please go ahead.
Hi. I have a couple of questions. If we start from the Learning business, I think you have already estimated that the growth in Spain would offset for the decline in Poland this year. Is this estimate still valid? And do you assume organic sales growth at Learning this year?
Yes, indeed, it is still valid that the higher growth in Poland last year, you know, higher growth in Spain this year, those two things will roughly offset in a full year basis for this year. Yes, we do expect net sales growth at a full year basis for Learning.
Okay. The second question on Learning, a bit of a follow-up. If we think about the total revenue pickup from the Spanish curriculum renewal, how much of that will happen this year? How much next year? How much in 2024 based on your current estimates?
Yeah. I think I would say let's not at this moment, halfway through the year, let's go into next year, revenue forecast, and the year after. I think that what you can see is, if you think about your own estimates and the indication that we are now giving on the growth this year, if you imagine that to shift to next year and 2024, that I think is a fair way of looking at it.
Okay. Moving on to the Media Finland business. First on events. It's a bit surprising to hear that, you know, the events business has not been able to return to pre-pandemic levels. I think the news flow has been quite positive regarding many of the festivals during the summer. Is this more of a Sanoma specific issue related to your events and their target audience, or would you say that, you know, also the other events are similarly impacted?
Yeah, I think that if we were not a listed company, we would also, from a marketing perspective, not be advertising lower than expected visitor numbers in all fairness. I think our competitors are of course doing everything to support a feeling that the festival season is going well, and you should book your tickets and, you know, tickets are short in supply and please book now. What we see, you might have read the Helsingin Sanomat article on the festival business, which was actually a good factual article that we could very much recognize ourselves also in. There you see that it's more general that every festival is suffering a bit from lower-than-expected visitor numbers.
Not low, because as I say, it might only be 5% below 2019, but given our expectations, we had been a bit exuberant as a business. What you see is that a lot of new festivals have popped up. That is, they popped up in April, so they started marketing. In May, quite a number of them also withdrew and they discontinued. That gave a lot of uncertainty to people saying, "Okay, wait a minute," you know. "So, is it not going through?" We had, for example, massive amount of calls from customers who had tickets saying, "Is your festival going through, yes or no?" The whole sort of getting back from corona went, if I'm sort of saying it a bit simple, went a bit messy.
Therefore, as an industry, we have also shot ourselves a little bit in the foot with that, because that uncertainty leads to very late ordering of tickets. The very late ordering, yeah, if then something pops up or, people say, "Okay, well, I thought I would go to the festival but let me do something else." You know that whole mechanism that we typically benefit from as a festival business, early ordering in the year, we can prepare our cost base for it, and then, you know, do a good festival season. The dynamic in the industry has not been beneficial.
I can of course not talk for what the results are of others, but what we see in general is that there's not a Sanoma phenomenon, even though maybe some of the festivals appeal to also a slightly more older audience who have been still more careful with corona. Because corona, of course, this summer was not gone. It was gone from the front pages, but it was not gone in reality in Finnish society. You know, all those factors played in, but that's maybe a little bit of an elaborate answer.
Okay, thanks. Can you please disclose sales and EBIT contribution from events in the Q2 ? Could you also remind us of the comparables from last year, if any?
Yeah. I think, let's maybe afterwards let IR provide you with the exact numbers on the exact comparables. Roughly speaking, when we talk about the events business, we talk about a EUR 30 to 35 million business for the full year. That is where we will, in our estimation, still round and about, land, probably a bit on the lower end. The profitability for the full year, so without now going into exactly how it splits between the quarters, but for the full year we guide a bit that we're expecting around breakeven performance.
Okay. Finally on advertising media markets, can you discuss the current sentiment? I think after Q1 you did flag a recovery, but what are you seeing at the moment?
Yeah. We saw clearly that recovery, you know, after the war, on starting 24th of February. After that start, we had, of course, quite a decrease. That already came back in March, April, and is, as you now see, the advertising market and the Sanoma performance is stable versus last year. That is over the whole of that H1. You know, there I would say we have quickly come out of that dip, that post-start of the war dip. Second half of the year, as we just discussed, hard to forecast, but hopeful.
Okay. You would still assume.
Hopeful-
stable advertising media markets.
Exactly.
also, in the second half of the year.
When I say hopeful, then I mean stable. Let's not raise expectations. For our full-year outlook is also under the assumptions that the advertising market is stable.
Okay, thanks. I don't have any further questions. We don't have any further questions on the phones.
Okay. We do not have any questions from the chat this time either. If no further from the audience here at Sanoma House, then I think that we are ready to thank everyone for participating and for active discussion. We will be available at IR after the event for any further questions. We wish you a nice day. Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you very much.