news posts
FeedPosted Nov 23rd 2009 9:00AM by Tom Johansmeyer (RSS feed)
Filed under: Internet, Google (GOOG), Microsoft (MSFT), News Corp'B' (NWS), Media World
Often, we confuse winning with being the best. This isn't always the case. There are plenty of ways to get ahead when you don't have the top product on the market. The smoke-filled backroom meetings may be a thing of the past, but the net effect lingers. This is exactly what went down, according to a Reuters report, when Microsoft (MSFT) had a chat with News Corp (NWS).
Microsoft suggested a relationship with News Corp which would involve the latter's yanking its news sites from Google (GOOG) ... for a fee, of course. This would cost the search engine giant -- which is also a news aggregation giant -- access to some hefty publications, including the Wall Street Journal, the Sun and the New York Post.
Continue reading Microsoft and News Corp talk about pushing Google aside
Posted Mar 15th 2009 4:40PM by Joseph Lazzaro (RSS feed)
Filed under: Newspapers, Internet, Competitive strategy, New York Times'A' (NYT)
The industry standard in journalism, The New York Times, is revisiting the issue of charging for online content.
New York Times (NYSE: NYT) Chairman Authur Sulzberger, Jr., told a Stony Brook (N.Y.) University audience Thursday that the company is considering "incremental" charges for website users, while keeping most of its site free, Bloomberg News reported.
Continue reading Once again, New York Times will evaluate charging for online content
Posted Feb 27th 2009 12:25PM by Joseph Lazzaro (RSS feed)
Filed under: Bad news, Newspapers, Internet, New York Times'A' (NYT), Media World

If it takes a good man to admit when he's wrong, then I'm up there.
My error: the speed of the decline of print newspapers. They're not dropping slowly: they're dropping like flies. And the metro dailies appear to be among the weakest: Detroit, Philadelphia, Chicago, San Francisco, Seattle, Denver. Who's next?
A journalism colleague called from Washington, D.C.: his reporter sister was laid off in Denver, whose ex-college roommate, the editor, got the axe in Seattle, and on and on it goes.
The big error in news/editorial conference rooms (and in this space, I might add): the failure to anticipate the speed of the decline of revenue. It's crumbling, due to the internet and the pronounced recession. (And here's hoping it's just a pronounced recession.) The online operations of many print dailies are doing OK-to-good, but the problem is they've started from such a low base and the ad market has become so fragmented/dispersed on the web that the web sites can't increase revenue fast enough to support the increasing losses from the print daily. The solution? Obviously, stop the print bleeding. In other words, shut down the print newspaper. And down they go. It is so sad. As noted earlier, some print dailies will survive with niches/specialization, but their overall operations will be smaller, due to the considerably lower gross annual revenue (at least initially) on the web.
Continue reading Print daily newspapers are going, going ...
Posted Feb 25th 2009 11:20AM by Michael Fowlkes (RSS feed)
Filed under: Earnings reports, Bad news, Products and services, Newspapers, Competitive strategy, Marketing and advertising, Recession

Shares of the
Washington Post Company (NYSE:
WPO) are trading in the red this morning after the company reported that its fourth quarter
profit dropped by a massive 77%. Net income came in at $2.01 per share, verse $8.71 per share in the same period last year.
As I noted in the earnings preview yesterday, the company's flagship newspaper and its magazine division (
Newsweek Magazine) have been hit hard with losses in advertising revenue, and both had a dismal 2008 year. The company's newspaper division
lost $14.4 million in the fourth quarter and had a $192.4 million operating loss for the entire 2008 year. Its newspaper division had a slight profit of $10.9 million in the fourth quarter, but on a full year basis it posted a loss of $16.1 million.
Continue reading Washington Post (WPO) misses the mark
Posted Feb 6th 2009 6:30PM by Joseph Lazzaro (RSS feed)
Filed under: Forecasts, Internet, Competitive strategy, General Electric (GE), CBS Corp 'B' (CBS), Media World
It is pretty obvious to investors that the Internet has accelerated the decline in print newspaper readership. It is also clear that the Internet is contributing to business model changes (and in many cases outright news/editorial budget reductions) at print magazines.
However, that the Internet would also compel changes in broadcast network news -- and in particular, the nightly network newscast -- might be viewed as less obvious. But that, in fact, appears to be the case.
Already dealing with a cable/satellite channel explosion that's decreased their viewership due to audience fragmentation (basically people have more channel choices), network news now must increasingly cope with the reality that adults tuning in have already seen and/or read about on the web the day's top news stories by the time the nightly newscast airs.
Continue reading Network newscasts, not just newspapers, feeling Web's impact, too
Posted Dec 3rd 2008 6:00AM by Daniel Solin (RSS feed)
Filed under: Getting started, Rich in America
This post is part of a series where personal finance expert Dan Solin looks at money secrets that help the rich stay rich. See them all.
Bad news sells. Good news is boring.
Inside media types will tell you that they are guided by this basic rule: If it bleeds, it leads.
The financial media is no exception.
There is a steady drumbeat of news about a "deep recession" or even another "great depression." How many times in recent months have you read about the "market crash" or the "financial meltdown," all meant to convince you that it really is different this time?
Is it really?
In September 1998, Newsweek carried a major story about an "unprecedented" worldwide "economic convulsion."
Fortune predicted "a fundamental change in the world's economic condition" in September 1998. Time Magazine, in June 1970, opined that we were in "the worst economic conditions since the Depression."
A "panic on Wall Street" was headlined by the
Philadelphia Inquirer in October 1987.
The list is endless.
Continue reading No. 2: Rich people know 'if it bleeds, it leads'
Posted Jan 15th 2008 1:35PM by Zack Miller (RSS feed)
Filed under: Management, Newspapers, Internet, Competitive strategy, New York Times'A' (NYT), News Corp'B' (NWS)

As the newspaper industry is assaulted by bloggers on one side and readers' decreasing willingness to pay for content on the other, the industry in searching for the right model.
Current trends show companies like the
New York Times (NYSE:
NYT) lowering or removing the "pay wall" between users and content. The
NYT recently discontinued its Times Select section, which required subscription fees, and since then,
traffic to parts of the site that previously required payment has increased greatly.
So, it's not surprising to read an
article today in PaidContent.org that claims similar success with a change in the model at the
Financial Times' website. PaidContent.org reports claims by staff at FT.com that admit to traffic and registration increases due to a recent change in the subscription structure.
"FT.com now allows readers coming in from blogs and other aggregators to read five stories a month for free and another 30 for free upon registering with the site," says PaidContent.org. After that, users would have to pay up.
The result?
Continue reading FT.com opens up (partially) and its traffic rockets (totally)
Posted Jan 10th 2008 3:30PM by Zack Miller (RSS feed)
Filed under: International markets, SEC filings, Insiders, Business of sports, Israel

In my day job as an analyst, I hear time and time again the conspiracy theorists, claiming that "the big guys" are out to get us, making it impossible to make money in the market. While insider buying is a good divining stick when analyzing companies, the idea that the institutions and insiders are just sitting, crouching in waiting, to sucker us into making investments decisions just to swipe our money is ludicrous.
While there are certainly cases of misdeed or asymmetrical information, this is not the case. Playing fields are generally level for all parties. That's what the SEC, FINRA and many governing bodies are there for -- to protect investors.
So, I find it interesting to read, on a couple of accounts, about Oscar Pistorius, the double amputee sprinter making a go at qualifying for the 2008 Olympics in China.
The NY Times ran a story today that cites that the amazing sprinter may hold an unfair advantage with his prosthetics and may subsequently be disallowed to compete.
Continue reading What the Oscar Pistorius story teaches us about investing
Posted Dec 20th 2007 2:55PM by Zack Miller (RSS feed)
Filed under: Russia
Why, amidst the re-emergence of Cold War tensions and the grinding down of individual liberties in Russia, was Putin named as Person of the Year? Read the article. But more than anything else,
Time cites that Putin "stands, above all, for stability-stability before freedom, stability before choice, stability in a country that has hardly seen it for a hundred years."
Fine. But what does this mean for Russian markets?
Well, the
FT article -- written by Douglas Helfer, manager of the HSBC GIF Russia Equity fund -- states that "Russian equities have underperformed most global emerging market peers by a wide margin this year due in large part to the uncertainty surrounding the current election cycle."
Russia is facing just the second transition of power since the Soviet Union fell more than 15 years ago, so investors have a reason to be skittish. That said, since Putin arrived in power, between January 2000 and March this year, the MSCI Russia index was up by 1,200%.
As my colleague
Aaron Katsman is fond of saying, Giddyup.
Zack Miller is the managing editor of IsraelNewsletter.com and a former equity analyst for a leading multinational hedge fund. Posted Nov 14th 2007 11:20AM by Eric Buscemi (RSS feed)
Filed under: Analyst reports, Analyst upgrades and downgrades, Target Corp. (TGT), Hershey Co (HSY), Rio Tinto plc ADS (RTP)
MOST NOTEWORTHY: Hershey Foods, Cognos, Resmed and Artes Medical were today's noteworthy downgrades:
- Hershey (NYSE: HSY) was downgraded to Underperform from Peer Perform at Bear Stearns. Bear believes the new CEO will be under intense pressure to improve operating performance, which will likely lead to higher R&D and marketing spending.
- Cognos (NASDAQ: COGN) was downgraded to Equal Weight from Overweight at Morgan Stanley following the acquisition by IBM (NYSE: IBM).
- ABN Amro lowered its rating on Resmed (NYSE: RMD) to Hold from Buy on valuation following the recent rally.
- Cowen downgraded Artes Medical (NASDAQ: ARTE) to Neutral from Buy following the company's disappointing Q3 report.
OTHER DOWNGRADES:
Posted Sep 19th 2007 5:30PM by Jonathan Berr (RSS feed)
Filed under: Law, Rants and raves, Marketing and advertising, Viacom (VIA), CBS Corp 'B' (CBS), Media World
In a move that will relive his ouster as anchor of the CBS Evening News and subsequent acrimonious departure from the network he called home for decades, Dan Rather has filed a $70 million lawsuit against CBS Corp. (NYSE: CBS), according to the New York Times.
The 75-year-old Rather obviously is bitter about how the network handled the investigation into how uncorroborated allegations about President Bush's service in the Air National Guard made it onto the air. In his lawsuit, Rather accuses CBS of committing fraud with its "biased" investigation that "seriously damaged his reputation," the Times says. Named in the suit are CBS president Leslie Moonves and Sumner Redstone, the media mogul who controls the company and its former parent Viacom Inc. (NYSE: VIA).
Oh brother.
Continue reading Media World: Dan Rather's lawsuit against CBS is just sad
Posted Jun 29th 2007 8:20AM by Douglas McIntyre (RSS feed)
Filed under: Launches, Industry, Google (GOOG), General Electric (GE), Amazon.com (AMZN), News Corp'B' (NWS)
The NBC unit of GE (NYSE: GE) has set up an online video venture with News Corp (NYSE: NWS) to challenge Google's (NASDAQ: GOOG) YouTube. The whole thing is all very confusing. Just the week News Corp's Myspace said its would set up MySpace TV to expand the use of video on its social networking site. It would seem that Mr. Murdoch is competing with himself.
But, leaving this confusion aside, Jaxon Killar, formerly of Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN) appears to have take the job as captain of the Lusitania. Figures released this week show that YouTube has an audience which is 50% larger than the next 64 video sites combined, and is still growing at an amazing rate.
It remains a puzzle why firms like NBC and News Corp want to spend what will probably be tens of millions of dollars, at least, instead of working out licensing agreement with a video sharing site that is already a success beyond anyone's wildest dreams.
It is another corporate victory of hope over logic.
Posted Jun 6th 2007 8:12PM by Gary E. Sattler (RSS feed)
Filed under: Press releases, Blogs, Rants and raves, Entrepreneurs
I'm not writing this piece for my associate bloggers here on BloggingStocks. The fact of the matter is that most, if not all of them are far better, more well versed and more professional than myself. I don't even consider myself a professional writer. Basically I'm a hack commentator with some creative potential. But be that as it may, I do know a thing or two about presentation, and if there's one thing I've learned about blogging is that the presentation is what garners the healthy numbers. So, for the aspiring and struggling bloggers out there who want to expand their potential, this one's for you.
I get quite a lot of my material from three major news services. United Press International, Associated Press International, and The Financial News Wire. The angle is that I tend to quickly skip past the stories that I know everyone else is reporting. I know what's being reported because I research that fairly well. So when I get down to sifting through the news to determine what I'll present to you, I already have a pretty well formed picture of what stories are not requiring another go around. Sometimes I do present a piece regarding a story that has been hashed over pretty well, but in those cases you'll notice that I don't just put out a carbon copy of the press release. In the cases when I grab onto a hot headline to present content to the readers, it is my purpose to give them more of a scoop of my opinionated brain matter than just another carbon copied dateline.
Continue reading The news, blogs, and press releases: Give 'em a piece of yourself
Posted May 31st 2007 3:50PM by Eric Buscemi (RSS feed)
Filed under: Columns
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Each bull market has its unique way of demonstrating enthusiasm for stocks. In the late 1920s, it was stock market chatter at the local barbershop that was an indication of stock market excesses. In the 1990s, The Beardstown Ladies, an Illinois-based investment club filled with seniors, graced the covers of news publications.
What about this bull market? It appears it is jock stock pickers.
Lenny Dykstra, of the 1986 New York Mets World Series championship team, writes for the TheStreet.com in its News & Analysis section. What does Lenny write about? The buying and selling of options on semiconductor and related stocks. Wow! That's not too risky.
It is time to take all those MBA diplomas and throw them out the window. Forget Graham & Dodd and the Efficient Market Hypothesis, go out and sell naked puts with Lenny Dykstra.
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