FeedPosted Oct 30th 2009 4:40PM by Steven Mallas (RSS feed)
Filed under: Earnings reports, Newspapers, New York Times'A' (NYT), Gannett Co (GCI), Media World
The Washington Post Company (NYSE: WPO) published data for the third quarter earlier today. Can't say I was mightily impressed by the numbers. Sure, there was a profit increase, but the top line wasn't exciting, and the newspaper division, as you might have expected, experienced a sharp decline in sales.
Net revenues rose 2%. Earnings per share came in at $1.81. That was sharply higher than the $1.08 per share recorded in the comparable period. Yet, I think you have to be careful in terms of reading too much positive spin into the growth rate.
Continue reading The Washington Post Company increases income, but shares sell off
Posted Oct 20th 2009 10:40AM by Tom Johansmeyer (RSS feed)
Filed under: Newspapers, New York Times'A' (NYT), Gannett Co (GCI), Media World
The folks in the news business are probably growing to hate Mondays. Gannett's (NYSE: GCI) profits are off by more than 50%, and the New York Times announced that it's chopping 100 jobs from the newsroom, along with an unspecified number elsewhere in the newspaper. Like Gannett, the New York Times cites declines in ad revenue as the reason for the decision. The company is hoping that employees will take voluntary buyouts where offered, but it is prepared to conduct a round of layoffs if necessary.
The newspaper, which is the flagship property of the New York Times Company (NYSE: NYT), cut 100 newsroom positions last year, mostly through voluntary buyouts, before a "relatively small" round of layoffs. This year's 100-job cut is approximately 8% of the newsroom, but the paper will still have the largest in the United States. Approximately 1,150 reporters and editors will remain. Already, 100 jobs have been slashed on the business side, leaving it now staffed at 1,850.
Continue reading New York Times to cut 100 newsroom positions
Posted Oct 11th 2009 3:10PM by Tom Johansmeyer (RSS feed)
Filed under: Deals, Rumors, Newspapers, Private equity, New York Times'A' (NYT)
The next step remains uncertain for what will go down in history as among the worst newspaper acquisitions.
On Friday, the deadline for submitting bids for the Boston Globe, which is owned by The New York Times Company (NYSE: NYT), passed. Two major contenders were expected to write figures on slips of paper and slide them across the proverbial desk: Platinum Equity, a Beverly Hills-based private equity firm and owner of the San Diego Union-Tribune, and Stephen E. Taylor, whose family sold the Globe in 1993.
Continue reading Boston Globe's future remains uncertain
Posted Jul 8th 2009 10:30AM by Zac Bissonnette (RSS feed)
Filed under: Newspapers, New York Times'A' (NYT)
The Boston Globe is burning through cash like an arsonist in an abandoned warehouse and the
The New York Times Co. (NYSE:
NYT), its parent, doesn't have much cash to burn. So now the company is looking to sell the
Globe.
The
New York Times -- in a fit of editorial freedom --
cites unnamed sources who report that the deadline for the first round of bidding has been extended to allow potential buyers to await the outcome of a July 20 vote by members of the Boston Newspaper Guild.
But there's more to it. According to the
Times, "They said possible buyers, wary of taking on the respected but money-losing newspaper, were also looking for signs that a deep slump in advertising was beginning to level off, as some industry executives had predicted it would."
Continue reading Boston Globe remains in limbo as auction is delayed
Posted Jul 6th 2009 2:20PM by Sheldon Liber (RSS feed)
Filed under: Newspapers, Rants and raves, Workspace, Technology, Recession

When I picked up my copy of Barron's weekly business journal from the front lawn this weekend I immediately felt something was different -- the weight of the journal and the thickness were definitely reduced by my measure. As a big fan of Barron's I thought, oh no, they are in trouble too.
When I examined it I found that the July 4 edition was a scant 32 pages. Last week's June 29 edition was 40 pages -- whoa --
a 20% reduction! That's a big reduction.
I keep my old copies of Barron's, so I was able to go back in time a ways to see if this was trend or an anomaly. First off I realized that the journal does fluctuate in length from week to week seemingly with the average being about 44 pages in the past few months. Then I went back further and noticed the trend was moving down. I thought well maybe it was the time if year, and of course the economy had to affect it too.
Continue reading Barron's struggling like everyone else
Posted Apr 28th 2009 5:00PM by Zac Bissonnette (RSS feed)
Filed under: Newspapers

The Wall Street Journal
reports (subscription required) that "Advertising revenue fell just 3.6% last year for dailies with circulations under 100,000, compared to a nearly 17% decline for the industry overall, according to trade groups."
That divergence has some investors looking to make investments in small newspapers. While large newspapers with a national news focus are threatened by the internet, local outlets that report on high school football games appear to be more immune.
Continue reading Small-town newspapers attract investors
Posted Apr 15th 2009 8:00AM by Zac Bissonnette (RSS feed)
Filed under: Newspapers
Most newspapers were just hanging on in 2008, but things got a lot worse in the first quarter of 2009.
The New York Times reports that some newspapers saw their ad revenue plunge 30% in the first three months of the year compared to the same quarter in the prior year. The decline in spending brought about by the recession is combining with the flight from print to devastate publishers.
According to the Times, industry analysts and executives "are expecting declines sharp enough to wipe out profit margins at many papers that, despite two years of battering, had stayed comfortably in the black, and to push already-weak publishers closer to bankruptcy, perhaps even closure."
Continue reading Newspaper ad revenue tanked in first quarter
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