BOSTON, June 10, 2009

Report: Times Co. Looking To Sell Globe

Goldman Sachs Reportedly Hired To Manage Sale Of Beleaguered Boston Newspaper

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(AP)  The New York Times Co. appears interested in getting rid of The Boston Globe, hiring investment bank Goldman Sachs to manage a potential sale of a newspaper that has plummeted in value since its purchase in 1993, the Globe reported Wednesday.

The Globe, citing two potential buyers it did not name, said Goldman Sachs would request bids for the 137-year-old newspaper in the next couple of weeks. The Times Co. previously announced it had hired the investment bank to sell its 17.5 percent stake in the Boston Red Sox and related sports properties.

A Globe spokesman declined comment Wednesday, and a Times Co. spokeswoman said the company does not comment "on rumors concerning potential acquisitions or divestitures."

The Times Co. recently renegotiated contracts with most of the Globe unions, saying it needed $20 million in annual savings and the elimination of lifetime job guarantees or could be forced to close the newspaper.

The Globe has been dramatically affected by the recession, the advertising downturn and the migration of readers online, with $50 million in operating losses in 2008 and a projected $85 million loss this year. Its average weekday circulation dropped nearly 14 percent to 302,638 compared with the previous year, while Sunday circulation was down more than 11 percent at 466,665.

The Globe's largest union, the Boston Newspaper Guild, narrowly rejected Monday a contract proposal with $10 million in annual pay and benefit cuts. It filed an unfair labor complaint with the National Labor Relations Board on Tuesday after the Times Co. immediately imposed a 23 percent pay cut to achieve the $10 million in annual savings.

Goldman Sachs had told interested parties it would accept bids regardless of whether the Guild approved new terms to replace an existing contract expiring at the end of the year.

"The New York Times has indicated to interested buyers that once the June 8 vote had taken place, once everybody knew what was going to happen - up or down - they would expect bids a couple weeks later," the Globe quoted one interested buyers as saying.

"That doesn't mean they have said they are going to sell it. They've just said they are willing to entertain bids. But it sure indicates an interest," one potential bidder said.

The Times Co. bought the Globe in 1993 for $1.1 billion - the highest price ever paid for a single American newspaper - from the Taylor family, who had controlled the newspaper for more than a century. Now some industry analysts say the Times Co. is trying to make the Globe leaner and more attractive for potential buyers - at far lower prices.

In 2006, the Times Co. rejected a proposal from retired General Electric Co. Chief Executive Jack Welch and others to buy the Globe.

At the time, the newspaper was valued at $550 million to $600 million. In a December research note, Barclays Capital credit analyst Hale Holden valued the Globe at $12 million to $20 million.

Thomas Kochan, director of the Institute for Work and Employment Research at Massachusetts Institute of Technology's Sloan School of Management, said a potential sale could come at a greatly reduced price - and could mean drastic cuts in the Globe's work force.

Other publications have sold recently, despite the overall depressed industry. In March, the parent company of The San Diego Union-Tribune agreed to sell the 270,000-circulation newspaper to a private equity firm, and the Times Co. said it would sell a newspaper in Florence, Ala., to a family that owns a newspaper in a nearby town.

But Fitch Ratings media analyst Mike Simonton doubts a sale is possible given the Globe's continued financial difficulties and union disputes.

"We're skeptical about the number of bidders who would try to purchase an entity that doesn't make any money and doesn't have a labor base that appears willing to try to get it toward being profitable," Simonton said.

© MMIX The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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by patriot2381 June 10, 2009 7:25 PM EDT
Don't expect to get "news" in the Globe. Expect pages of advertisement, interlaced with drivel commentary. The Globe is expensive, over a dollar, with all the advertising and at that selling price, to be loosing $20M annually, makes them sound like GM, who sold millions of cars annually and lost billions annually for decades. The Globe should sink or swim. now is the time, go for it!
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