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The decline continues

  • 22-09-2016 11:50am
    #1
    Registered Users Posts: 1,879 ✭✭✭IRE60


    Via the Campaign site - report on the worsening state of print. (Cant find it on Neilsons' site). Some of the budget cuts are savage:


    Newspaper revenues fall amid talk of joint ad sales

    The national newspaper advertising slump has worsened since the Brexit vote, with revenues crashing 18% year on year in August, making it the worst-performing month of the year so far.

    Print ad sales dived 14%, or £95m, in the first eight months of the year to £575m from £670m in the same period a year ago, according to Nielsen.

    Newspapers got a brief respite around the Brexit referendum, when ad sales fell only 4.5% in June and 11% in July. Every other month this year has seen a fall of at least 14%.

    The newspaper print ad market fell 13% in 2015 and 9% in 2014.

    A number of high-profile brands abruptly slashed their print ad expenditure in favour of Facebook and other digital channels.

    Tesco cut spend by 85% year on year in the first eight months of 2016 to £1.8m, O2 reduced its outlay on print ads by 45% to £4m and Marks & Spencer dropped its spend by 28% to £7m.

    Worsening revenues will add to pressure on newspaper owners to consider pooling their ad sales in a single sales house in order to gain scale in their negotiations with media agencies, improve efficiency and cut costs.

    News UK, Trinity Mirror, Telegraph Media Group, Guardian Media Group, DMGT and Northern & Shell have been in talks since at least May, when Campaign first reported that discussions had begun.

    Steve Booth, chairman of MC&C and co-founder of BLM, has been leading the initiative, dubbed Project Juno.

    Newspapers are understood to have commissioned Enders Analysis and lawyers to report on how a joint ad sales house might work and the likely obstacles emerging from a Competition


«13456730

Comments

  • Registered Users Posts: 1,879 ✭✭✭IRE60


    There's no end to this, DMGT trading update:

    dmg media:
    year to date underlying# revenues declined by 2%. Circulation revenues were down 2% due to declining volumes, although benefited from the implementation of cover price increases of the Monday to Friday editions of the Daily Mail, in February 2016, and The Mail on Sunday, in July 2016. Both the Daily Mail and The Mail on Sunday continue to hold significant market share of 23.1% and 22.0% respectively*. The disposal of Wowcher, which occurred in November 2015, had an adverse revenue impact with dmg media's total reported revenues declining by 5% in the eleven month period.
    Total year to date underlying# advertising revenues across dmg media were down by an underlying# 4%, with a 12% decline in print advertising being partly offset by 17% growth in digital advertising. For the five weeks since 21 August 2016, total advertising revenues for the business have decreased by an underlying# 10%. As previously indicated, the reported full year results will benefit from the inclusion of 53 weeks of trading, compared to 52 weeks in FY 2015.

    Mail businesses: MailOnline's advertising revenues in the eleven months increased by an underlying# £13 million (18%), partly offsetting a decline of £20 million (13%) at the Daily Mail and the Mail on Sunday. Underlying# advertising revenues across the Mail businesses as a whole, for print and digital combined, were consequently down by 3%.

    MailOnline: year to date underlying# digital advertising growth of 18% reflected continued encouraging growth in both the UK and the US. MailOnline's global monthly unique browsers in August 2016 stood at 248 million, up 30 million or 14% on last year, and average global daily unique browsers were 15.3 million, an increase of 11% on last year.

    # Underlying revenue is revenue on a like-for-like basis, adjusted for constant exchange rates, disposals, closures, non-annual events occurring in the current and prior year and acquisitions.


    Mods: Any chance of having a 'sticky' for Media Results. Many of the postings are simply results based for Media companies. Rather than opening a new post each time it might be beneficial to have one thread just devoted to results. One stop shop?


    C


  • Registered Users Posts: 5,532 ✭✭✭JTMan


    Agreed with the suggestion of a media financial results thread.

    This is just simply astonishing from Trinity Mirror:

    "print advertising revenues fell by 21% and newspaper sales revenues dropped by 6% in the third quarter. Total revenues fell by 9% in the third quarter, slightly more than the 8% drop reported in the first half of the year. The company said publishing revenue is down 10%; within this total print revenues fell 12% while digital climbed by 11%. Digital display advertising and transactional revenues grew by 24% as the company’s online audience increased."

    Meanwhile, the Daily Mail owner is cutting 400 jobs.

    Also, The Telegraph has written down the value of their newspapers by 150 million.

    I always expected a slow steady decline of the newspaper industry over the coming years. The decline has unquestionably accelerated and is anything but slow decline.

    Independent Star should have their results on CRO.ie next week which will also make interesting reading.


  • Registered Users Posts: 5,532 ✭✭✭JTMan


    Independent Star (owners of The Irish Daily Star) had their 2015 accounts displayed on CRO.ie today.

    - Revenue down from €21.7m to €20.2m.
    - Cost of sales down from €13.8m to €12.5m.
    - Distribution costs up from €3.5m to €3.7m.
    - Admin costs down from €1.8m to €1.5m.
    - Exception costs down from €0.8m to €0.2m.
    - Profit up from €1.3m to €1.9m.
    - Dividends up from €1.0m to €1.6m.
    - Staff numbers down from 61 to 57.

    Overall:
    - Revenue continue to trend in the wrong direction thanks to lower newspaper sales and advertising sales. Their bread and butter continues on a downward spiral.
    - Profit increased due to lower costs of sales (possibly due to the Irish Times printing contract), lower exceptional costs (less redundancies in 2015) and lower admin costs.
    - While costs are being very well controlled and cut, there is a limit to how much further costs can be cut and revenue is only going in one direction.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,879 ✭✭✭IRE60


    Very interesting:
    • 7% decline in revenue is about as expected.
    • Costs - yea you can still try and cut back - but there's a floor at some point. Interesting if the IT contract is a cost saver.
    • Distribution costs up! Now that's, possibly, a little strange - they did (if the addled memory is correct) they did a part work for the euros with stickers etc - that might have added a few quid to the bill (and to revenue).
    • Margin went from 6% to 9% - little healthier - but that's just going to be eroded as they hit the floor in cost savings and the revenue continues to fall.
    • Shareholders took a fair chunk in dividends - but I suppose they took the added extra profit earned in the year and in both years leaking 300k in the company - take the money now!


  • Registered Users Posts: 5,532 ✭✭✭JTMan


    "Cost of sales" is mainly salaries and printing costs (with distribution costs being a segregated P&L line). Salaries (including social security and pensions) went down from €5.3m to €4.7m. So €0.5m saving came from salaries so I guess the rest of the cost of sales saving was a printing cost saving but it could be something else as there are other smaller expenses inside this expense line.

    From looking at the INM and IS accounts, I am beginning to think that Newspread and perhaps EMN News have been hiking their prices to publishers.

    Yeah, Dirty Desmond (who interestingly resigned as director on 1 January 2015 but still owns 50%) seems to be using IS for pocket-money while he can. Northern Shell are making losses so he is not getting dividends with his other media interests.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 11,739 ✭✭✭✭expectationlost


    is it a decline or a change?


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,879 ✭✭✭IRE60


    A seismic shift leading to a decline!

    There's a good bit in the middle of the BBC Media Show podcast on the changing fortunes of the dailymail.co.uk
    http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b07wn3zz


  • Registered Users Posts: 5,532 ✭✭✭JTMan


    is it a decline or a change?

    More a decline than a change. Revenue from print is not being replaced like-for-like by digital revenue. Not even close. Take Independent Star, for example, whereby they have virtually no digital revenue and print is in a terminal decline curve.


  • Registered Users Posts: 11,739 ✭✭✭✭expectationlost


    JTMan wrote: »
    More a decline than a change. Revenue from print is not being replaced like-for-like by digital revenue. Not even close. Take Independent Star, for example, whereby they have virtually no digital revenue and print is in a terminal decline curve.
    who cares about the Star?


  • Registered Users Posts: 5,532 ✭✭✭JTMan


    who cares about the Star?

    Same point applies to nearly all other publications. Decline superceeds change from a revenue perspective.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 1,879 ✭✭✭IRE60


    who cares about the Star?

    The 60k people who buy it every morning and the 60 people who work there.


  • Registered Users Posts: 11,739 ✭✭✭✭expectationlost


    IRE60 wrote: »
    The 60k people who buy it every morning and the 60 people who work there.
    change happens


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,879 ✭✭✭IRE60


    change happens

    Oh - believe me - it does. Without doing the interstpeak on it, change is one thing, but 'disruption' is where the industry is at. Its like chaos theory meets business!


  • Registered Users Posts: 15,918 ✭✭✭✭Loafing Oaf


    JTMan wrote: »
    I always expected a slow steady decline of the newspaper industry over the coming years. The decline has unquestionably accelerated and is anything but slow decline.

    Actually I would have expected stuff like the Indie going online only to have started happening years ago. Seems to me print circulation has been falling steadily for years but most everything else in the newspaper industry has been staying the same, defying the laws of economic gravity. Maybe now long-held-off changes, including paper closures and mergers, are going to start happening fast over the next few years...


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,879 ✭✭✭IRE60


    On the subject of the Indi

    Independent Print, the online-only title’s publisher, is not likely to publish accounts for 2016 until next year, but Lebedev has disclosed some financials to the Financial Times.

    The company expects to record revenues of £20m in 2016 and claims its digital advertising revenues have grown by 45% year on year.

    "By going online-only we freed ourselves from the unwieldy infrastructure of print, and allowed ourselves to be far more flexible," Lebedev said.

    "We are profitable for the first time in 23 years, which brings with it new opportunities."

    In August it emerged that the title had grown its overall readership by close to 50% in its first quarter as an online-only publication.


  • Registered Users Posts: 5,532 ✭✭✭JTMan


    FT: The future of newspapers: owners seek safety in numbers. The outlook worsens.

    https://t.co/gjBijnB2b2


  • Registered Users Posts: 5,532 ✭✭✭JTMan


    NY Times newspaper results:
    the New York Times reported a steep decline in print advertising revenue for the third quarter, adding to the newspaper industry’s woes.
    For the quarter, print advertising revenue fell 19 per cent, driving an 8 per cent decline in total advertising revenue.
    The drop followed a 14 per cent decline in print advertising revenue in the second quarter.

    Digital revenue increased but did not cover print losses.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,879 ✭✭✭IRE60


    Looks lie the deals are not going through either - seemingly Gannett bankers pulled the finance in the 11th.

    Gannett Co. on Tuesday abruptly ended its six-month effort to acquire Tronc, the owner of the Los Angeles Times, Chicago Tribune, Orlando Sentinel, Baltimore Sun and several other newspapers.

    http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-gannett-tronc-offer-20161101-story.html


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,879 ✭✭✭IRE60


    Telegraph splitting content - killing paywall and access to "premium" content at £2 a week - not available through f/b. It's a good start!

    http://www.campaignlive.co.uk/article/telegraph-axes-metered-paywall-launches-premium-service/1414403


  • Registered Users Posts: 5,532 ✭✭✭JTMan


    WSJ has let staff go and reduced the size of their print edition.

    http://www.politico.com/media/story/2016/11/wall-street-journal-to-consolidate-print-edition-004843


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  • Registered Users Posts: 1,879 ✭✭✭IRE60


    I get the distinct impression from some of the recent articles dealing with the USA that the papers carry very 'bloated' sections for particular strata of a given metropolis - which are no longer paying for themselves - the supplements I mean).
    The Sunday Times have just poached the editor of Elle to head up (something like) exclusive content and also be head of the Style Mag. Chase the money!
    I don't think for a moment that a decent long-form article has seen its day, actually in the face of 140 characters and the standard that's building, they are a welcome relief.
    But print is so massively cost consuming, so some cull has to be expected.

    On that, I read an article on the speech an owner gave, reproduced in print then repurposed for a blog, in the last days of a Chicago evening paper in the '70's. Delivered to the newsroom as he was about to flick off the lights.
    Dispersion of city dwellers to the 'sticks' where it was too costly to ship 10 papers to was one of the factors. TV was the other!
    There are parallels in the article mirroring today's print media - but different advisories.
    I'll try and see if I can dig it up again and post it here.


  • Moderators, Business & Finance Moderators, Motoring & Transport Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 67,053 Mod ✭✭✭✭L1011


    Yoy're definitely on to something there - the "color sections" in some US papers are immense in size and hence cost - both printing and content. They're a long way off the 5 kilo NYT era (although it seems that was bollox, as nobody would get every supplement) but they make even the Sunday Times or Saturday Guardian's level of added sections seem small and all very thin.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,879 ✭✭✭IRE60


    IRE60 wrote: »
    I'll try and see if I can dig it up again and post it here.

    love quoting myself!

    http://newsosaur.blogspot.ie/2014/03/so-long-again-chicago-daily-news.html


  • Registered Users Posts: 5,532 ✭✭✭JTMan




  • Registered Users Posts: 5,532 ✭✭✭JTMan


    The Sunday Business Post have a short article on the Irish Times ...

    - The Irish Times is seeking 15 redundancies.
    - Digital subscribers are now 50k BUT this includes non-paying subscribers such as students.
    - 1.1. million operational loss in 2015.
    - Re-org going on to focus 66% on digital and 33% on print.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,879 ✭✭✭IRE60


    JTMan wrote: »
    - Re-org going on to focus 66% on digital and 33% on print.

    That's fine - in theory - but where's the money!


  • Registered Users Posts: 5,532 ✭✭✭JTMan


    The SIndo have done a hit piece on their rival the Sunday Business Post here.

    Some interesting parts to the article:
    - SBP has hiked its price by 7%.
    - Sunrise Media is now the name of the media group that owns the SBP.
    - The main shareholder in Sunrise Media is Conor Killeen's Key Capital. (As with the prior corporate structure).
    - Growing online revenues is taking longer than expected. (no surprise there).
    - Profit of under 100k last year. (pathetic return).


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,879 ✭✭✭IRE60


    I'm all for facts - which the Beano managed to twist- on the circulation of the post they say:
    "Down 5pc on the first half of 2015" it's actually 3.5% - it's simply factually incorrect - which casts doubt on anything else in the article.
    Given they are down 7% in the same period they are in no position to preach!
    It's simply a bitchy article - not newsworthy or accurate.


  • Registered Users Posts: 11,739 ✭✭✭✭expectationlost


    JTMan wrote: »
    The SIndo have done a hit piece on their rival the Sunday Business Post here.

    Some interesting parts to the article:
    - SBP has hiked its price by 7%.
    - Sunrise Media is now the name of the media group that owns the SBP.
    - The main shareholder in Sunrise Media is Conor Killeen's Key Capital. (As with the prior corporate structure).
    - Growing online revenues is taking longer than expected. (no surprise there).
    - Profit of under 100k last year. (pathetic return).

    their website has gotten better


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  • Registered Users Posts: 11,739 ✭✭✭✭expectationlost


    JTMan wrote: »

    good the Irish Times is still too tall


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