Showing posts with label Newsprint costs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Newsprint costs. Show all posts

Tuesday, 18 November 2008

Newsprint demand down but will there be Play on newsprint prices?

It just isn't getting any better is it?

September 07-September 08, U.S newsprint demand went down 13%, newsprint prices went up 13%. That's the real number to worry about for the IHT because my understanding is that IHT newsprint is bought off the back of the higher NYT newsprint purchases. But in Europe the price gets worse too. As does demand.


Newspapers face fresh printing pressures (FT)
By Robert Anderson in Stockholm and Christopher Mason in Ottawa
Published: November 16 2008 17:30 Last updated: November 16 2008 17:30
Newspapers, which are already bracing themselves for falling advertising sales as the global economy turns down, face more bad news next year as newsprint producers try to push through steep price increases.
European newsprint producers led by
Norske Skog, the world’s second-largest, are currently negotiating with customers to increase prices by up to 20 per cent.
They believe that recent capacity cuts have given them the market power to compensate for years of rising costs, flat prices and falling margins.
“We’ve been under quite a drastic margin squeeze for several years,” said Norske Skog’s spokesman. “We see a momentum now for increased prices.”
All of Europe’s big newsprint producers are currently lossmaking as demand continues to fall because of the switchover to internet publication, while wood, energy and transport costs have risen significantly.
European producers have responded this year by committing to cut some 1m tones of capacity – 6 per cent of the total, according to Norske Skog, double the 3 per cent fall in demand.
As cost pressures start to ease, this gives producers a shot at raising margins.
“In Europe we will see the biggest changes, as we’ve had constant overcapacity for several years,” Norske Skog says.
European producers are also benefiting from a fall in imported newsprint as North American producers turn back to their home markets.
North American producers have suffered even more from falling demand, as the switch to the internet has taken hold faster there, but they have also been quicker to consolidate and cut capacity. In the year to September North American newsprint prices soared 33 per cent while consumption continued its descent, falling nearly 13 per cent over the same period.
North American Newsprint producers AbitibiBowater, Catalyst Paper, and Tembec initially compensated for drops in domestic demand by exporting to western Europe, Latin America and Asia.
But the strengthening dollar and the steep rise in North American newsprint prices have swept away European price advantages.
In the first nine months of 2008, newsprint exports to western Europe fell 20.6 per cent from the same period last year, according to the Montreal-based Pulp and Paper Products Council. Exports to Latin America and Asia grew by 17 and 9.3 per cent respectively in the same period, reflecting producers’ efforts to seek out new growth markets.
Analysts remain doubtful, however, whether newsprint producers will be able to push through the price increases in full without more capacity cuts.
“If [North American] producers don’t come out and shut down more capacity, it looks like prices will peak at the end of this year,” said Rahul Gandhi, a New York-based paper analyst with CreditSights.
“The decline in demand though will not stop, so it’s not looking good for producers if they are unable to raise prices.”
“There is a possibility that [European] prices will go up but demand will also go down,” says Johnson Imode of Standard & Poor’s Equity Research in London. “Clients will be able to strike quite a hard bargain with newsprint manufacturers.”

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/a2cac4b2-b400-11dd-8e35-0000779fd18c.html?nclick_check=1


More housekeeping at the Harbinger (of doom) announced - what exactly is going on there I couldn't tell you - but equity swaps reported at around the $15.00 mark - and the NYT Company share price slips yet further.

I said $10 would be a tipping point, we got there shortly thereafter, and we have tipped. How that re-scheduling of borrowing is going I wouldn't like to say but this is beginning to look a lot like GM. Citibank cut another 24,000 jobs yesterday, taking it to 20% of its workforce, and short of the NYT doing something similar, I can't see a turn around anytime soon.

Even if 2010 (end thereof at best, I might add) sees us come out of the advertising recession, I fear that's too far off for the NYT. Advertisers by then may just have given up on print.

Yesterday, the NYT shuttered its award winning mag PLAY having said it would keep 4 issues in 2009, so there you go.

Talk was up about Play as recently as last October (as was talk of no layoffs) but according to an email to Fishbowl NY, from Play editor Mark Bryant, "The company needs to make some pretty considerable cuts going forward."

There's an understatement.

"It was on the schedule. It was in the budget," Bryant wrote when asked "why the magazine had been shuttered so soon after both he and the Times brass confirmed it would continue next year".

According to Bryant, Play wasn't losing money. "I'm am told that last year we more or less broke even, thanks largely to the Nielsen deal for the Olympic issue," he wrote. ('Nielsen bought out the entire issue. It was, according to Bryant, the "largest single day sale in the history of The New York Times".)

Et alors? More or less break even, even with the single day sale in the history of the NYT. Says it all.

Share price now: $7.10 on a day that hit a low yesterday of, yes, $7.

That's 47% down on three months, 61% down on 1 year. Not that anyone's counting or anything.

Anyone want to buy a GM SUV? But where's print's Toyota Prius? It's hard to find a media outlet, print or Internet, that isn't hacking staff off as fast as it can, and one can't help wondering when this option is put into Play at the NYT.

I still fancy a 'go-private' move - hard pressed to see an alternative; hope there are some rich people who couldn't live without their NYT.

The family could sell some voting stock to Harbinger/The Mexican Gunslinger to get that debt down, but what would be the implications of that? Very ugly.




New York Times Co
(NYT:NYQ)
NYT on other Exchanges
7.10 USD Last
-0.24 -3.27% Change
1.3M Below Average Volume

Data as of November 17, 2008 16:04 exchange time. Market data is delayed by at least 20 minutes

Tuesday, 14 October 2008

USA Today newsstand price to rise 33 pct to $1; paper cites 12-year high in newsprint costs




AP

USA Today price rising to $1 on newsprint costs
Friday October 10, 3:43 pm ET
By Anick Jesdanun, AP Business Writer
USA Today newsstand price to rise 33 pct to $1; paper cites 12-year high in newsprint costs
NEW YORK (AP) -- USA Today said Friday it will raise its newsstand price by 25 cents to $1 to offset rising newsprint costs.
The 33 percent increase could affect the nation's highest-circulation newspaper more than price hikes affect the other two national newspapers, The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal, because USA Today is more dependent on single-copy sales. The cost of the Times went up 25 cents in August, while the Journal's price rose 50 cents in July.
Even after the increase, USA Today's newsstand price will be less than the $1.50 now charged for weekday editions of the Times and $2 for the Journal.
Neither home delivery rates nor distribution agreements with hotels will be affected by the newsstand price increase for Gannett Co.'s flagship newspaper, which takes effect on Dec. 8. One-third of USA Today's sales are in hotel-guest copies.
Larry Lindquist, USA Today's senior vice president for circulation, said newsprint costs have risen to a 12-year high and further increases are expected later in the year.
"We remain confident that the continued strong demand for USA Today from consumers, and our price relative to our competition, means that the marketplace will support this adjustment to our newsstand price," Lindquist said in a statement to The Associated Press.
Rumors of the price hike at Gannett Co.'s flagship newspaper circulated earlier on a blog maintained by a former Gannett editor.
Newspapers across the country have been facing flat or declining circulation and plunging advertising revenue primarily because of the migration of readers to the Internet. A weakening economy has further driven down ad sales this year.
USA Today's price increase could help the paper generate more revenue if circulation doesn't drop drastically as a result. But it's not likely to offset completely the losses it's seeing in advertising. The latest figures available show that ad revenue declined 13.5 percent in August compared with the same month in 2007.
USA Today passed the Journal to become the top-selling paper in the United States in 1999. Current weekday circulation is 2.28 million, down slightly from a peak of 2.34 million in 2004, the same year the paper last increased its newsstand price, from 50 to 75 cents. USA Today has not seen circulation slip as much as other large dailies.
In fact, in the latest reports from the Audit Bureau of Circulations, USA Today was one of the few to post a slight gain -- 0.27 percent in the six-month period ending March 30, compared with the same period a year earlier.
USA Today does not publish on weekends, but its average daily circulation exceeds that of any Sunday paper, which generally has higher sales than weekday papers.
Rick Edmonds, media business analyst at the journalism think tank Poynter Institute, said many papers have been cutting back on newsprint use, in part because they have fewer ads to run. But Edmonds said newspaper price increases may be inevitable as advertising drops and papers find the cost of newsprint up 20 percent from a year ago.
Newsprint prices have been rising largely because most of it is produced in Canada, whose currency until recently had been rising against the U.S. dollar, Edmonds said.
The newsstand price increase "makes sense, but it puts the burden on the publishers to make sure there's that much value in the paper," he said.
Gannett shares rebounded in trading Friday from a 9.1 percent loss early in the day to a 5 percent drop, or 66 cents, to $12.61 by late afternoon.


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