Tribune lenders must ask Zell tough questions 16 Apr 2008 After all, most of its shareholders aren t able to hold his feet to the fire. And someone has to the newspaper company is near to breaching covenants and it has $2bn in debt coming due in next year. If lenders want to recover their investment, they need to take a strong stand.
Sam Zell may go from leverage victor to victim 1 Apr 2008 The mogul made a fortune selling his REIT at the top of the LBO boom. But his Tribune deal looks to be spiraling. The company is barely complying with its loan covenants and has $3bn in shortterm debt to refinance. It may have to sell some core assets to stay solvent.
Will Reed’s £1.1bn mags sale ease LBO famine? 6 Mar 2008 At least six buyout groups may be suitors for the publisher s unglamorous business titles among the first private equityled auctions since the credit crunch. But even this might be a stretch for financial sponsors in the current market.
New York Times chooses one battle too many 21 Feb 2008 The newspaper company recommended that shareholders not vote for activist fund Harbinger Capital s slate of board candidates. That looks foolish. Other shareholders are rooting for Harbinger. There s a good chance the Times will lose a proxy battle.
Reed Elsevier reshape makes it attractive 21 Feb 2008 The AngloDutch publisher is no more. The decision to sell its B2B unit, and the $4.1bn cash acquisition of US risk management group ChoicePoint transforms Reed into a focused online workflow solutions provider . It might not have the same ring, but it s a smart move.
New York Times should open up to activists 12 Feb 2008 Hedge funds Harbinger and Firebrand plan to nominate 4 directors to the board of the familycontrolled newspaper group. Rather than engage in a fight it will almost certainly lose with angry investors, the company should reach a truce and take on two of the activists' directors.
Credit wobbles don’t stop Reed’s $4bn sale 17 Jul 2007 The AngloDutch group is selling its education business to Houghton Mifflin Riverdeep at an impressive 21 times operating profit. But Reed isn t immune to credit woes. It s taking shares in the debtladen acquirer as part payment. Still, Reed looks ripe for revaluation.
Reed LBO rumours look overblown 28 Jun 2007 The £15bn AngloDutch publisher seemingly ticks all the right boxes: low debt, stable businesses and high earnings visibility. But Reed is very big. And publictoprivate deals are hard to do in the UK. So don t hold your breath.
How can Murdoch win Dow Jones? 14 May 2007 Why not offer a really fat premium to the supervoting shareholders, while keeping the bid for ordinary shares flat? The promise of a News Corp board seat, WSJ independence and extra investment, might be enough to clinch the support of the Bancroft family.
Thomson-Reuters gives another reason for Dow to sell 8 May 2007 Rupert Murdoch s $60 takeover offer may have looked attractive last week. Thomson s purchase of Reuters only makes it more so. The deal could undermine Dow s cash engine its news wires arm which piggybacks ThomsonReuters for distribution.
Murdoch should detail WSJ investment plans 8 May 2007 He'd probably boost its brand internationally to take the FT headon in Europe and Asia and invest in US political coverage and TV. Under the controlling Bancroft family, by contrast, Dow Jones has arguably been crimped of investment to pay fat dividends.
NY Times holders deal blow to Sulzbergers 24 Apr 2007 How can that be? After all, 58% of the newspaper publisher s shareholders voted in favour of directors at Tuesday s annual meeting. But cut the numbers differently to reveal how nonfamily shareholders voted. A majority of them gave the thumbsdown to directors.
Yahoo disappoints investors again 17 Apr 2007 The internet group didn't just miss 1Q estimates. It undermined confidence in the rollout of its new advertising system, Panama. This is the last straw for CEO Terry Semel. If Panama's hopes don't pan out in the next quarter, it will be time for new management.
Scardino should have done the opposite at Pearson 26 Nov 2006 Many of the businesses that she sold, such as Madame Tussauds, are now worth more than when she sold them. The value of many of businesses she bought are also now worth less. An "antiScardino" would have done better than the real one.
At last, a boring LBO 16 Nov 2006 Reader s Digest may be the most boring company on the planet with revenues as flat and steady as the Great Plains. But that's a classic LBO profile. What's amazing is that this was overlooked while far riskier assets were gobbled up. Reader s Digest may be the most unexciting company on the planet with revenues as flat and steady as the Great Plains. But that's a classic LBO profile. What's amazing is that this was overlooked while far riskier assets have been gobbled up.
Forbes reluctant to adopt capitalist tool 8 Aug 2006 The familyowned business publishing empire has unabashedly championed the free market since 1917. But its reluctance to adopt public ownership has left the group capitalstarved and forced it into the arms of private equity.
Tribune local breakup would add value 9 Jun 2006 McClatchy s piecemeal sale of Knight Ridder showed newspapers are more highly prized in private hands than the public markets. Apply the same logic to Tribune, and its newspaper assets could be worth at least 10% more than investors give them credit for.
New York Times buyout not as likely as it looks 21 Apr 2006 A buyout by the Sulzbergers is superficially attractive as the stock tumbles and outside shareholders become increasingly pesky. But the family might conclude it s better to put up with sniping from powerless shareholders than paying heed to banks or private equity.
VNU risks another big clash with investors 14 Feb 2006 Some shareholders believe the Dutch media group could fetch far more via a breakup than a sale to private equity. The real issue is one of trust. The board should follow Hollinger s lead and appoint a credible interim chief executive to manage the sale.
Hedge funds aren’t the only bullies 18 Nov 2005 Traditional longonly investors are also getting uppity, kicking companies into play and heaping pressure on errant chief executives. This is a good sign that they are taking their fiduciary obligations more seriously and learning from the hedge funds.