Posts for Ticker ‘SSP’

Rating the Top 25 Newspaper Websites 2009

newspaperThe struggle for large urban newspapers to stay in business has largely been an effort on the part of their managements to increase revenue on the Internet faster than it is lost in their print editions. It has become clear that the race is becoming one that newspapers are unlikely to win. Internet revenue for some online editions is actually dropping. Print advertising is going down as fast as it did in 2008. Several large newspapers including The Rocky Mountain News have folded in the last year. The owners of other papers, particularly The Boston Globe and The San Francisco Chronicle, have threatened to fold these properties unless workers are willing to accept significant cuts in people or compensation.

A few newspaper websites have extremely large numbers of visitors. Online research service Compete.com reported that NYTimes.com had nearly 15 million unique visitors in May. The New York Times Company (NYT) reported that its online revenue fell 8% to $42.2 million in the first quarter, despite the size of the flagship paper’s website and other online properties such as Boston.com, the website affiliated with The Boston Globe. Online revenue was only 12.8% of the company’s sales, hardly adequate to have a significant impact on a firm  in severe financial trouble. The Washington Post Company’s newspaper revenue associated with online publishing fell 8% to $23 million in the first quarter of 2009. Washingtonpost.com had 8.7 million unique visitors in May, which makes it a large website, but clearly not big enough. Newspaper publishing revenue at the Post was $160.9 million in Q1, down 22% from the same period a year ago. The company losing revenue that fast cannot afford to have its online revenue shrink and account for only 14% of total sales. Read More »

The 52-Week Low Club 7/25/2008 (SSP)(MNI)(CVG)(ATI)(CROX)(AFFX)

Sad_clownScripps (SSP) Newspaper stock takes big hit on earnings. Falls to $7.17 from 52-week high of $147.78.

McClatchy Newspapers (MNI) Another newspaper company with problems. Sells down to $4.30 from 52-week high of $26.43.

Convergys (CVG) Still dropping after downgrade, to $11.77 against 52-week high of $20.

Read More »

Top 10 Pre-Market Analyst Calls (ASMI, BWA, CCL, RCL, EMC, SSP, MWA, NSM, NST, SCG, WBMD)

These are ten of the analyst calls we are focusing on early this Wednesday morning in pre-market trading:

  • ASM Intl NV (NASDAQ: ASMI) raised to Buy at Jefferies.
  • BorgWarner (NYSE: BWA) Raised to Overweight from Equalweight at Lehman.
  • Carnival (NYSE: CCL) and Royal Caribbean (RCL) were both Downgraded to Hold from Buy at ABN AMRO.
  • EMC Corp (NYSE: EMC) cut to Neutral at Bernstein.
  • EW Scripps (NYSE: SSP) raised to Outperform at Bear Stearns.
  • Mueller Water Products (NYSE: MWA) Raised to Outperform from Neutral at Baird.
  • National Semi (NYSE: NSM) raised to Buy at Deutsche Bank.
  • NStar (NYSE: NST) Cut to Sell from Neutral at Goldman Sachs.
  • Scana Corp. (NYSE: SCG) Cut to Sell from Neutral at Goldman Sachs.
  • WebMD Health (NASDAQ: WBMD) Cut to Sell from Neutral at Goldman Sachs.

Jon C. Ogg
June 18, 2008

24/7 Wall St.’s Take on Scripps & Media Break-Ups (SSP, BLC, TRB, JRC)

EW Scripps Co. (NYSE:SSP) is following the media trend of separating its operations into more pure play media sectors.  The good news here is that the valuable interactive unit will no longer have to be tied to newspapers.  The bad news is that the stations have to go with the paper unit, but arguably that might be construed well by some.  Scripps will split operations and become "Scripps Networks Interactive" and "The E.W. Scripps Company."

Scripps Networks Interactive will have an estimated $1.4 Billion in annual revenues with some 2,100 employees and will consist of:

  • National lifestyle media brands and associated enterprises that operate collectively as Scripps Networks, including television’s HGTV, Food Network, DIY Network, the Fine Living Television Network and Great American Country and their category-leading Internet businesses.
  • The new company also would include online comparison shopping services Shopzilla and uSwitch and their associated Web sites.

The E. W. Scripps Company will have combined annual revenues of $1.1 Billion and some 7,100 employees and will include:

  • Daily and community newspapers in 17 U.S. markets;
  • 10 broadcast television stations clustered among the nation’s largest 50 markets, including six ABC affiliates, three NBC affiliates and one independent station;
  • The character licensing and feature syndication businesses operated by United Media;
  • Scripps Media Center in Washington D.C., which includes the Scripps Howard News Service.

If you have seen 24/7 Wall St. for very long, or if you have read all the reports out there on what is happening with newspapers, you’ll know that the media sector is looking for ways to get away from newspaper revenues.  Unfortunately, old fashioned newspaper readers are dropping off at a faster clip than smokers.  The next wave of cuts the industry will feel is when newspapers get cut more from many hotel chains that leave them at the front door of each occupied room.

If you enjoy reading about break-ups and other special situations we produce our own "Special Situation Investing Newsletter" for subscribers.  We will be reviewing this for subscribers as the break-up gets closer.  Unfortunately, the company believes this tax-free spin-off will not be completed until the end of the second quarter of 2008.  There is a lot of calendar between now and then, and many more months of bad news out of newspaper companies.  One thing may help papers in 2008: the presidential election.  Depending upon how the valuations are laid out, it is even conceivable that the interactive content unit might have predators looking at it right out of the gate.

The market is reacting with enthusiasm to the Scripps plan.  Shares are up almost 8% at $45.50, back in the middle of its $37.89 to $53.39 trading range over the last 52-weeks.

Jon C. Ogg
October 16, 2007

Bank Of American Slams Newspaper Industry

Bank of America initiated coverage on several newspaper companies and the news for them was not good.

Gannett (GCI), McClathchy (MNI), The New York Times (NYT), and EW Scripps (SSP) were all started at "neutral" and some of bank’s price targets are only about where the stocks trade now.

B of A set a price target on NYT of $21. The shares closed at $20.72 yesterday. SSP was started at $43 against a current price of $41.14.

The ratings are likely to drive the stocks lower. Wall St. sees no way out for most of these companies. Their print advertising is falling at a rate of 5% to 10% a year, and online revenue does not come close to making up for that.

Douglas A. McIntyre

The Newspaper Industry’s Hardest Choice (NYT)(GCI)(MNI)

Prisoners in an escape tunnel have two choices if the structure starts to collapse. Go back to jail or run for the light and hope not to get buried.

This week Scripps (SSP) said it would close its newspaper in Cincinnati on December 31. The daily in Savannah said it will shut down circulation in areas out of town. A column in BusinessWeek suggested that the San Francisco Chronicle shut down and go completely online. The same piece quotes management from the paper as saying it lost $330 million between mid-2000 and 2006. Yesterday, large real estate operator Realogy said newspapers will receive only 70 percent of its home-sale advertising by 2010, down from 84 percent this year.

The newspaper industry cannot decide its future based on collected anecdotes, but the hard figures out for Q2 are grim. McClatchy (MNI), which doubled down on the business by purchasing Knight-Ridder, showed pro forma numbers which said that total advertising at the chain dropped 9.8% during the three months ending June 30. Automotive, real estate, and employment classifieds were all down more than 15%. The company’s papers in California were off 16%. In Florida, the number was over 21%.

Numbers from The New York Times (NYT), Gannett (GCI), and Dow Jones (DJ) are a bit different, but all tell fundamentally the same story.

Almost any investor can find a story every day about the death of the newspaper industry. Almost none offer any solutions.

But, the industry may be able to salvage itself and find a way to make money long term.

Based on some conversations with an industry expert, a road out might look like this.

Circulation in areas any real distance from printing presses has to be cut. If the people want to read the news, they can do so on the newspaper website. Circulation in areas closer to plants would be cut into two pieces. People who want to continue to get the physical paper can have it delivered, but their rates would rise to cover more of the costs of paper and distribution.

Newspapers would continue to use their presses and distribution networks to deliver mini-papers to all of the households in the geographic area near the plant. The same delivery system that distributes paid subscribers the entire paper would drop a smaller paper, perhaps eight pages, at every home. The newspapers are already incurring the expense of driving down these streets, so the additional cost of this distribution is de minimus. The program would increase the footprint of the paper without adding a great deal of cost. These mini-papers would also be used to distribute pre-printed inserts, a big revenue base for the industry.

The goal of the mini-paper would be to push readers to the internet. Each story would be a summary with a web address attached. The entire story would run in the online version. Print would exist to feed web versions of the paper.

As costs for the full paper increase over time, more and more people get the mini-paper and readers are pushed online.

The easy argument against this program is that internet revenue, even with this kind of promotion, would not rise fast enough to offset print advertising. But internet advertising is only about 5% of total newspaper ad revenue, so on its own it is not growing fast enough.

It has been obvious since the advent of the internet that getting web traffic for specific sites is difficult without using other media or internet properties. While newspapers still have fairly large readerships, they have that opportunity. But, it won’t be there forever.

Douglas A. McIntyre can be reached at douglasamcintyre@247wallst.com. He does not own securities in companies that he writes about.

Newspaper Carnage Continues, But…. (NWS, DJ, TRB, MNI, GHS, JRN, NYT, GCI, SSP, BLC, LEE )

There has been a solid recovery in newspaper and media plays in recent weeks, for some obvious merger reasons.  But the continuously deteriorating fundamentals in the sector lend a credence that the sector is just getting a reprieve that is masking the obvious trend.

Despite the mini-rally seen of late in newspaper stocks, Goldman Sachs remains unchanged and suggests selling into strength in the newspaper sector.  The purchase of Tribune (TRB) at 10-times EBITDA by Sam Zell and the major premium buyout offer from News Corp. (NWS) to Dow Jones (DJ) are fueling the speculative fire for more deals in the sector. Goldman thinks the ad revenues in Q2 will be down in the 5% range for newspapers, which is the second worse performance since the recession impacted Q1 2002.

What is interesting is that Goldman notes that there ‘undoubtedly will be further consolidation’ in the sector, but expresses a ‘remain underweight’ stance because of downward revenue trends, operating margin pressure, and downward earnings revision bias.  It also notes that valuations are not enticing for a declining fundamental basis.

So how far off of lows are these companies? 

Company (Ticker)        Price Today    52-Week Range
Gannett (GCI)                   $58.75         $51.65-$63.50
McClatchy (MNI)               $27.90         $27.42-$45.29
EW Scripps (SSP)            $46.00        $40.86-$53.39
New York Times (NYT)    $25.85        $21.54-$26.90
Belo Corp. (BLC)              $22.30         $14.93-$22.94
Lee Entrprs. (LEE)            $24.92        $22.98-$25.13
Journal Comms. (JRN)    $13.80        $10.05-$14.00

If you read media publications in the sector, the trend has been that major metro publications are the ones that have been experiencing the rapid drop-off.  The rural and small city papers is where the mergers have been and where the strength has been.  It isn’t so much that these areas are just full of non-webby bumpkins because that isn’t the case.  It’s just that the farther and farther you get away from major population centers the live and daily information becomes decentralized and it easier to keep it focused in a newpaper and ‘weeklies’ type of local publication.  That lends credibility to GateHouse Media Inc. (GHS-NYSE), still a fairly recent IPO.

With some of the trends continuing and an economy that is slowing, it is hard to fall back in love with the sector.  But there has been so much damage and the ‘undoubted consolidation’ just makes it harder and harder to consider putting new funds to work in the companies that have not recovered.  Sure, there will be more carnage in the sector and there will probably be some extra erosion in the stocks of the ones that have less value. 

A year from now it is likely we’ll still be discussing the carnage in newpaper and print media trends.  But we might be discussing the trends of companies that have either merged or been taken private, or at least fewer public companies.  With an election in 2008, its still a toss-up if newspapers will stabilize or if the new-media will steal away so much that even a larger market may not help.  If you have read our work frequently you will probably recallreferences to "Less Bad Is Good," and this may be a trend to watch for (or maybe just hope for) inthe sector.  Perhaps digital paper will take newspapers to a new realm.

The verdict is still out, for now.

Jon C. Ogg
June 6, 2007

Jon Ogg can be reached at jonogg@247wallst.com; he does not own securities in the companies he covers.

Media Mania After Dow Jones & News Corp. Merger Talk

Stock Tickers: DJ, NWS, RTRSY, TOC, NYT, WPO, SSP, MNI, BLC, LEE, GHS, XFML

It looks like almost all media stocks are running on David Faber’s report that Dow Jones (DJ-NYSE) is now a target of Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp. (NWS-NYSE).  Here are the companies running:

Reuters (RTRSY), Thomson (TOC), New York Times (NYT), Washington Post (WPO), EW Scripps (SSP), and McClatchy (MNI). Even some of the second and third tier names are benefiting from the move to the likes of Belo Corp. (BLC), Lee Enterprises (LEE), and GateHouse Media (GHS).  The effects could be far-reaching enough that it even benefits the recent Xinhua Finance Media (XFML) for Chinese financial news coverage that recently came public.

This is a big “IF,” but if this deal does occur and if it is allowed to go through and all the parties that be agree to terms, then this deal would be a true game changer.  This could create an entirely new consolidated environment, and it create many other deals if this comes to pass. 

Jon C. Ogg
May 1, 2007

Jon Ogg can be reached at jonogg@247wallst.com; he does not own securities in the companies he covers.