Showing posts with label New York Times Deathwatch. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New York Times Deathwatch. Show all posts

Thursday, June 25, 2009

New York Times Sale Rumors Quashed... For Now

In an interview with MarketWatch's Jon Friedman, Janet Robinson, CEO of embattled former media titan and now merely distressed media company scrambling to plug debt covenant holes, New York Times, has announced that she has had it with other members of the evil, speculative media world.

Robinson objects to criticisms surrounding the company's handling of the much-publicized labor negotiations with the Times' Boston Globe unit. She is weary of the endless speculation that the Times has already decided to launch a pay model for some or all of its Internet properties, noting that the company expects to make an announcement this fall.

And no, no, no -- the Times is not about to be acquired by Mexican billionaire and prominent Times stockholder Carlos Slim, Hollywood mogul David Geffen or anybody else, she says. Robinson is particularly tired of hearing the rumors that the company will be sold.

Robinson's unhappiness with the media echoed throughout my nearly two-hour lunch with her at the Times headquarters on Tuesday. The media, Robinson told me, "have to look beyond the stock price."

Janet - we do, and all we see is a mountain of piling debt with scary covenants attached, which if not addressed will result in an even worse stock price ($0.00 is worse than any 52 week low).

Robinson most resents the rumors that the Times is on the block. The Sulzbergers, who run the company, "are committed to the ownership structure it has now," she said.

"The family has made it very clear that they are the owners of the New York Times Company and are very supportive" of the stewardship of Robinson and Arthur Sulzberger Jr., the chairman of the parent company and publisher of the New York Times.

Resents sale rumors? Nobody in their right mind would go after the NYT equity at this moment - in fact, the NYT would be ecstatic to find someone who would be willing to pay even half of last year's high for this melting ice cube. Carlos Slim (and others) is smart - he is buying fulcrum debt and fully expects to get equitized (read debt-for-equity conversion), when the company files for bankruptcy. And file it will, unless it manages to dramatically reduce its existing debt load. But for that to happen, existing debtholders will extract their pounds of flesh. Either way, the Sulzbergers' moment of fame (and max wealth) is over: at this point they can fool themselves with promises of a future that will never occur (they are forgiven for this - after all this is the administration's MO, and the sterling example our President sets for corporate America), or they can proactively address the mountain of debt, and part with a major chunk of equity in exchange for keeping the company alive. Of course, if existing trends in media ad spend, and commodity price inflation (ahem, paper) persists, nothing the NYT, Janet or the Sulzbergers do will have any relevance on the future at all. Sphere: Related Content

Thursday, March 12, 2009

NY Times Selling Private Jet

Hot on the heels of its sale leaseback transaction, the NYT, in a mad dash to generate any possible cash, has disclosed it is now selling its corporate jet next. In a barely visible footnote a on page 42 of its Proxy filed yesterday, NYT will be parting ways with its 14 year old plane, which nobody has been using for a while as "the company no longer permits any use of the corporate aircraft." According to the NY Post, the jet in question is a Dassault Falcon 50ex, the predecessor the the Falcon 7x made infamous after Vikram almost spent $45 million in taxpayer money to fly in style while Citi was being nationalized. Due to 50ex's old age and, well, lack of coolness, it is being sold for an alleged asking price of $9.5 million (after being bought for $17 million in 1998), despite brokers expectations that it is worth at most $8 million. Even assuming the Gray Lady manages to sell the plane into a moribund private jet market, the $8 million cash a sale would generate would only go toward paying 4 months of interest on its new sale leaseback. Sphere: Related Content

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Fallout Between Harbinger And Early Backer Harbert?

Hedge Fund Alert reports today that Harbinger Capital is trying to buy out its early backer, Alabama-based Harbert Management. The split comes at an odd time, but the decline in Harbinger assets under management, which went from $26 billion in 2008 to only $9 billion currently may have something to do with it: the flagship fund has fallen 27.8% while the Special Opportunities Fund has plummeted 56.1%, excluding redemptions. Nonetheless, Harbinger did well for Harbert over the years with no losing years since inception, and in fact returned 116.1% in the flagship fund and 170.4% in the Spec Ops Fund in 2007.

Harbert had provided $25 million in seed funding when Harbinger launched in 2001, and after a "mutual" decision, Phil Falcone is now in the process of repurchasing the seed stake for an undisclosed sum. Post the deal, Falcone will own 100% of the fund. Harbert will maintain current investments with the various Harbinger funds: Harbinger Capital Partners Fund 1, Harbinger Capital Partners Special Situations Fund and the offshore versions of these. Harbinger will continue to rely on Harbert for operational support. In the meantime, Harbinger which has invested lots of money in such recent flops as New York Times (20% stake) and Cleveland Cliffs (10%), is probably looking at more pain going forward. Sphere: Related Content

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

New York Times to Start Charging From Some Or All Online Content

Developing story: per executive editor Bill Keller online commentary.

Good way to alienate the remaining 10 internet readers Sphere: Related Content

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

New York Times To Cease Providing Monthly Revenue Updates

In a quest to "improve" transparency into its business, the New York Times will cease providing monthly sales updates beginning this month, and only give clarity on a quarterly basis said the CEO on a phone call this morning... Next quarter we assume this practice will be adjusted to providing any sorts of updates to once a decade.

Also, in much more troubling news, NYT announced its pension is currently underfunded by $625 million. We hope Andrew Ross Sorkin has been saving up. The silver lining, Capex will drop in 2009... I guess the plan for another exoskeletal skyscraping monstrosity on top of Port Authority will be put in hold for now.
Sphere: Related Content