LosAngelesTimes posts
FeedPosted Feb 6th 2009 5:15PM by Mark Fightmaster (RSS feed)

I found an interesting article on the
Los Angeles Times' site today. For those not aware, Major League Soccer (MLS) is about to lose David Beckham, just one year after the soccer coverboy signed a five-year deal to play for the Los Angeles Galaxy. Beckham was allowed to also play for European powerhouse AC Milan, and now he doesn't want to leave.
As the story notes, this looks bad for American soccer because Beckham wanted to be " ... an ambassador for the game here and, hopefully, it is going to encourage other players to come to the States and be part of this because soccer in America can become much bigger." Well, how is that working out? Answer: so well that the ambassador is ready to leave.
Continue reading Will MLS have to bail like Beckham?
Posted Dec 8th 2008 8:50AM by Douglas McIntyre (RSS feed)
Filed under: Deals, Bad News
A lot of America's newspaper companies have been in trouble. Advertising has been down as much as 15% this year and that has gotten worse in the last few months.
Almost all of the chains have had to cut staff and some properties have been put on the block to help the companies pay down debt. But, none of the really big operators in the business have had to go bankrupt.
That may change this week. The Tribune Company, which went private about a year ago, may not be able to make its debt service payments. According to The Wall Street Journal, "Tribune's latest actions underscore the deepening distress enveloping Tribune and other newspaper publishers."
The headline about the Tribune's trouble may be about the newspaper industry, but the story is just as much about the private equity/LBO trend that hit record levels less than two years ago. The Tribune Company was able to borrow almost $12 billion in an industry which was already beginning its downturn. That says a remarkable amount about the level of risk that bankers were willing to take to get fees.
Now, the firms that put the debt into the Tribune transaction are faced with getting pennies on the dollar. Newspapers may be a bad business, but it looks like private equity is turning out to be even worse.
Douglas A. McIntyre is an editor at 247wallst.com
Posted Nov 27th 2008 11:02AM by Gary Sattler (RSS feed)
Filed under: Employees, Scandals, Headline News
An internal probe and preliminary criminal investigation, regarding alleged misappropriation of funds, has resulted in a
lifetime ban against Tyrone Freeman, now the former head of United Long-Term Care Workers Union. Freeman, who had ostensibly served the interests of approximately 190,000 union members, who each earn an average wage of about $9 per hour, has also been ordered to repay more than $1 million of allegedly misdirected funds.
Some of the indicated misappropriations involved Freeman's directing of questionable payments to the businesses of both his spouse and her mother, among others. Additionally, some of the transactions which are being investigated involve payments which Freeman had allegedly directed to himself.
The Los Angeles Times, which originally broke this story in August, outlines the results of an internal probe which has been conducted by Service Employees International Union (SEIU).
LA Times reports: "The SEIU's inquiry included hearings conducted by former California Supreme Court Justice Joseph Grodin. His report to (SEIU President, Andy Stern) stated that Freeman had engaged in a pattern of financial malpractice and self-dealing."
Continue reading Service employees union boss takes it on the chin
Posted Jul 3rd 2008 8:00AM by Laurie Pasternack (RSS feed)
Filed under: Newspapers, Magazines, Microsoft (MSFT), Yahoo! (YHOO), Apple Inc (AAPL), Time Warner (TWX), News Corp'B' (NWS), AMR Corp (AMR), iPhone
MAJOR PAPERS:
- According to people familiar with the situation, the Wall Street Journal reported that Yahoo! Inc (NASDAQ: YHOO) is again talking to Time Warner Inc (NYSE: TWX), this time about taking over AOL, with Time Warner taking a stake in the combined entity. News Corporation (NYSE: NWS) has its eye on any Yahoo moves. Meanwhile, Microsoft Corporation (NASDAQ: MSFT) is considering what its next move against Yahoo might be and is talking to News Corp.
- The Wall Street Journal also reported that, as part of the company's plan to cut costs, Tribune Co's Los Angeles Times newspaper may look to cut about 250 jobs, including about 17% of its news staff.
- The Financial Times reported that Chrysler, which has been searching for foreign partnerships, signed with China's Great Wall Motor a memorandum of understanding to explore long-term business ties in areas that include technology, distribution and components.
OTHER PAPERS:
- According to the Dallas News, AMR Corporation's (NYSE: AMR) American Airlines informed its flight attendants' union that is may lay off 900 flight attendants on August 31.
WEB SITES:
- Yonhap reported that LG Electronics will release "Dare," a new touch-screen mobile phone in the U.S. that will compete with Apple Inc's (NASDAQ: AAPL) latest iPhone models.
Posted Mar 21st 2008 4:10PM by Jonathan Berr (RSS feed)
Filed under: Newspapers, Marketing and Advertising, , News Corp'B' (NWS)

To the surprise of no one, the newly private Tribune Co. is probably going to sell
Newsday. The once-venerable New York paper, like all metro dailies, has fallen on hard times and Tribune's new CEO and owner Sam Zell has got a mountain of debt to pay down.
According to
The Wall Street Journal . Long Island-based
Cablevision Systems Corp. (NYSE:
CVC) and New York's
Daily News as potential buyers. Rupert Murdoch probably would love to buy
Newsday and combine it with
News Corp's (NYSE:
NWS)
New York Post, but I am not sure whether the antitrust regulators would allow it. He is trying to merge everything but the editorial staffs of the
Post -- never a hugely profitable enterprise -- with
Newsday to save money in a joint operating agreement, the
Journal says.
After spending $5 billion for Dow Jones, Murdoch needs to pick all of the low-hanging fruit he can. I expect this deal to happen. Maybe it will lead to others for papers that buyers are eager to unload. Perhaps, Murdoch might buy other Tribune papers from Zell such as
The Baltimore Sun or
Los Angeles Times. As the Australian tycoon showed in chasing Dow Jones, influence matters as much to him as profits. Gaining more big papers furthers that goal at the expense of shareholders.
Posted Sep 24th 2007 3:32PM by Brian White (RSS feed)
Filed under: Bad News, Industry, Google (GOOG), Marketing and Advertising
Are big-time newspapers going to survive the instant news rush and immediate availability of the internet?
That question gets bandied around so much every day that some tennis balls would be jealous. But, just like other businesses that continue to be upended by the freedom of the internet, newspapers seem particularly vulnerable. The New York Times is losing readers, other big papers hide content behind "paid access" models on their own websites when anyone can get local and national news on laptops, cellphone screens and any other net-connected device, most often for free.
What do newspapers have left to contribute? A lot, actually -- but not morphing with the times is going to be the downfall of many of them. Newspapers will have to give their content away for free to survive (say some), and in return for losing that revenue, they'll have to get with it in terms of online advertising. Ask Google (NASDAQ: GOOG) about this, as the company owns a billion-dollar empire based on that very principle.
As subscribers (paid ones, mind you) leave in droves, what's to become of many newspaper publishers that rehash the same AP wire stories, mix in local color and commentary and pass off this combo to increasingly leery customers? Some will go the way of the dinosaur unless change is made, as in now. Others, like the Washington Post and The Wall Street Journal, will most likely figure out how to strike a fine balance of excellent, journalistic content and advertising support behind that content.
For others, what value is left to add to the newspaper business that the internet (like Google News) can't destroy? That's the billion-dollar question for the next decade or so. The days of loading up on wire stories while eliminating local, original content to save money are over, and smart publishers knew it years ago. The ones battling with that concept now are already in a world of hurt. Some don't even know it.
Posted Jul 31st 2007 9:15AM by Eric Buscemi (RSS feed)
Filed under: Newspapers, Magazines, Toyota Motor Corp. (TM), AT and T (T), News Corp'B' (NWS), ,
MAJOR PAPERS:
- Rupert Murdoch's $5B, $60 a share offer for Dow Jones & Company (NYSE: DJ) appeared to be closer to a final deal as Dow Jones was negotiating with News Corporation (NYSE: NWS) to pay advisory fees for the Bancrofts, the majority stock holders, in exchange for some of the holdout members to back the deal, according to the Wall Street Journal.
- Barron's Online's "Inside Scoop" column reported that so far this year, five top BlackRock Inc (NYSE: BLK) executives grossed more than $82.4M by selling 486.5K shares on the open market at per-share prices ranging from $147.30 to $179.93, according to Thomson Financial data.
OTHER PAPERS:
- Mortgage woes continued to deepen yesterday, reported the New York Times, which noted that the New York Stock Exchange elected not to allow trading yesterday on the shares of American Home Mortgage Investment Corp (NYSE: AHM), after the company reported that it would suspend its dividend and faced "significant" margin calls from banks.
- The New York Times reported that AT&T Inc (NYSE: T) has made a deal with online music retailer EMusic that will allow people to buy songs from independent labels through their cell phones.
- The Los Angeles Times reported that Toyota Motor Corporation (NYSE: TM) will introduce a new "standard" version of its Prius gas-electric hybrid for the 2008 with a base price of $20,950, 5.5% less than the lowest cost 2007 model.
Posted Jul 25th 2007 1:09PM by Zac Bissonnette (RSS feed)
Filed under: Earnings Reports, New York Times'A' (NYT), ,
Two of the major newspaper companies reported second-quarter earnings today. The New York Times (NYSE: NYT) reported EPS of $0.34 from continuing operations compared with $037 in the second quarter last year, before items. Tribune Company (NYSE: TRB) reported EPS from continuing operations of $0.17 compared with $0.53 in the second quarter of 2006. Those earnings were brought down by about $0.30 in one-time charges related to job cuts and write-offs.
Tribune is expecting to be acquired by mogul Sam Zell through a complex process where employees would own a large portion of the company but, according to the Associated Press, "Now the industry's accelerating decline has some Wall Street experts wondering whether the deal for the parent company of the Chicago Tribune, Los Angeles Times and Chicago Cubs could fall apart." Revenues decreased 7% in the quarter and while the company remains publicly confident in the deal's prospects, the stock will plunge if it doesn't go through.
Shares of the New York Times soared on the news of Rupert Murdoch's bid for Dow Jones (NYSE: DJ). It has since given up all those gains as investors realized that was a one-shot deal rather than a sign of some new paradigm where the newspaper industry is something other than a declining wreck.
Tribune's saving grace has been the fact that its non-newspaper properties are performing well, but the industry continues its free fall. Advertising revenues fell 5.7% at the New York Times.
The newspaper industry remains one of the ultimate contrarian bets and, if the industry does somehow stage a turnaround, believers will be richly-rewarded. But none of these stocks are for the faint of heart, and I'll be staying far away for now.
Posted Apr 3rd 2007 3:45PM by Jonathan Berr (RSS feed)
Filed under: Deals, From the Boards, Management, Marketing and Advertising, Private Equity, Columns, , Entrepreneurs
If David Geffen wants the Los Angeles Times so badly, new Tribune Co. (NYSE: TRB) owner Sam Zell should let him have it.
Zell has plenty of other headaches to deal with in taking over the Chicago-based media company. The Los Angeles Times is chief among them.
The LA Times, which is one of the best newspapers in the country, is a mess. Circulation is falling at about double the national average. LA Times editor James O'Shea told the New York Times that he believed that the drop stabilized at the end of last year and added that online readership is growing though as the New York Times points out, ``he could not site specific figures."
In plain English that means that the paper's online business is stiil tiny compared with the print business. That's the case with all daily newspapers. But big city papers such as Tribune's Newsday, Baltimore Sun and Chicago Tribune, are in fierce competition for readers from local papers and Internet sites which makes the circulation declines more problematic.
Zell reportedly has no great passion for the newspaper business. The Wall Street Journal points out that Zell is likely to seek further budget cuts "a move that will likely be on popular with staff, particularly at the Los Angeles Times."
Unpopular? That may be an understatement. Editor Dean Bacquet stepped down last year amid a dispute over budgets. More journalists will bolt if there is further belt-tightening and morale will continue to plunge. Tom Taulli pointed out the potential pitfalls employees will face from the employee stock ownership plan Zell created to buy Tribune.
If Geffen wants to take on some if not all of the risks of a risky media property, Zell should sell him an interest in the LA Times or the whole paper outright.
Maybe the LA Times staff will find the inevitable cuts more palatable if they come from a local billionaire rather then one from Chicago. He has plenty of other things on his plate now.
Posted Mar 30th 2007 2:10PM by Jonathan Berr (RSS feed)
Filed under: Other Issues, Deals, Competitive Strategy, Marketing and Advertising, Employees,
Have billionaires Eli Broad, Ron Burkle and Sam Zell run out of ways to spend their money? Maybe this explains their bidding war for Tribune Co. (NYSE:TRB).
Last night, Broad and Burkle said they would pay $34 per share for the Chicago-based media company, $1 more per share than an offer Tribune was on the verge of accepting from Zell. Both deals would be financed through employee stock ownership programs, according to the Los Angeles Times.
Broad and Burkle will invest $500 million in Tribune, more than the $300 million Zell reportedly offered, the paper said.
Money, though, isn't going to solve Tribune's problems.
Big city metros such as The Los Angeles Times are particularly vulnerable to competition from the Internet and smaller local papers. Tribune's largest paper also has had turmoil in its management ranks that reportedly has hurt morale in the newsroom. The other big Tribune papers like Newsday, The Baltimore Sun and the Chicago Tribune have similar problems.
Zell said he plans to keep Tribune intact. I don't think Burkle and Broad have made a similar pledge. Regardless, the Chicago Cubs are probably going to get a new owner at some point in the not-too-distant future.
These wannabe press lords may regret having their wish come true.
Posted Mar 27th 2007 12:15PM by Jonathan Berr (RSS feed)
Filed under: Other Issues, Deals, From the Boards, Television, Newspapers, Marketing and Advertising, Private Equity, Columns, , Gannett Co (GCI), Media World
Tribune Co. (NYSE: TRB) is close to accepting Sam Zell's $8 billion offer to take the company private, ending a soap opera that's gone on for too long.
The owner of the Los Angeles Times and Chicago Tribune will probably reach an agreement with Zell by a self-imposed deadline of March 31, people familiar with the matter told Bloomberg News. Zell's offer values Chicago-based Tribune at $33 a share, a 6.8 percent premium over yesterday's close.
Zell plans to create an employee stock ownership plan to finance the debt needed for the acquisition, Bloomberg says, adding that billionaire plans to keep the company in tact.
Tribune should take Zell's money and run as fast as it can to the bank.
I've questioned before whether the grave dancer really understands what's he has gotten himself into. If Zell is a success, I will gladly admit that my skepticism is wrong. Still, I bet that this isn't the last private equity deal among newspaper publishers.
Gannett Co. (NYSE:GCI) and McClatchy Co. (NYSE:MNI) would seem like logical candidates to go private. Though like other publishers they are struggling, Wall Street has considered both companies to be well run. McClatchy's reputation, though, took a hit when it acquired Knight Ridder. Gannett has the advantage of owning both USA Today and strong local media franchises.
All newspaper publishers are better off out of the public markets.
Posted Mar 26th 2007 9:44AM by Jonathan Berr (RSS feed)
Filed under: Before the Bell, Deals, Newspapers, Competitive Strategy, Private Equity, Columns, New York Times'A' (NYT), , Media World
Sam Zell has gotten really rich without my help. But I have to wonder what is motivating the "grave dancer" to buy Tribune Co. (NYSE:TRB).
Of all of the things that that Zell could spend with the billions he's earned from the sale of his Equity Office Properties company, Tribune seems to be an odd choice. I know he's from Chicago and Tribune, owner of the Chicago Tribune and Los Angeles Times, is based there. But it's going to take more than civic pride to turn around Tribune.
The trends in the newspaper business are lousy. Though publishers are gaining Internet advertising revenue, it's not at a fast enough rate to off-set the decline in their core print business. Young people don't read papers and probably aren't going to start anytime soon.
Maybe Zell can prove naysayers like me wrong. Maybe private equity players will take an interest in Gannett Co. (NYSE:GCI), New York Times Co. (NYSE:NYT), and other publishers. But the newspapers continue to decline at faster rates than even the most pessimistic forecasts.
As the New York Times points out today, newspapers had an awful February. Advertising plunged 14 percent at USA Today, 7.5 percent at the Times (where I've done freelance writing), 5 percent at Tribune and McClatchy Co. (NYSE:MNI). Believe it or not before investors LIKED McClatchy before it acquired Knight Ridder last year.
I don't know what Zell and the members of the billionaire boys club who suddenly fancy themselves as William Randolph Hearst think they can do as publishers that the current crop of managers haven't already tried. Tribune, whose papers are mostly based in big cities where competition for readers is intense, seems like a particularly difficult company to turn around.
Like I said earlier, Zell has done fine in his career without my help. I only hope he understands the rough road ahead for Tribune.
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