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If US newspapers resemble the Irrawaddy delta, is Google’s Eric Schmidt planning an airlift?

Posted by Peter Kirwan on 13 June 2008 at 00:30
Tags: Gannett, Google, Guardian Media Group, News Corp, Yahoo

Eric Schmidt, the chief executive of Google, is not what you’d call a loose cannon.

This is a man who, in previous incarnations, became an arch-enemy of Microsoft’s expanding monopoly during the 1990s. Now, at the top of a company surrounded by anti-monopoly moaning, this poacher has become a extremely adroit gamekeeper.

So it’s been fascinating to watch Schmidt talking with apparent compassion about the plight of US newspapers twice this week — once in Washington DC and once in San Francisco.

In Washington DC, he said:

“We all care a lot about this. Newspaper demand has never been higher. The problem is revenues have never been lower. So people are reading the newspaper they’re just not reading it in a way where the newspapers can make money on it. This is a shared problem. We have to solve it. There’s no obviously good solution right now.”

In San Francisco, he said:

“It’s a huge moral imperative to help here.”

To the best of my knowledge, this is the first time that Schmidt has talked in public about Big Media’s plight in the same way that the boss of Oxfam might talk about the need to get aid into the Irrawaddy delta.

Perhaps Schmidt had read the news earlier this week about Gannett’s £3bn write-down — and found his heart melting with pity for the content companies that supply Google with so much valuable raw material.

Perhaps. But it seems equally likely to me that Schmidt’s plaintive outburst was prompted by reading advance copies of the European Commission’s 100-page report on Google’s acquisition of Doubleclick. (The full monty was published yesterday. You can download it in PDF format here.)

The Google-Doubleclick combination is highly controversial. By some accounts, Google already controls around 70% of the paid search ad market, which in turn comprises slightly less than half of all online advertising. By acquiring Doubleclick, which has a big market share in online display, the company could extend its dominance from search to the serving of what we might still call banners and buttons.

In the event, the Commission approved Google’s acquisition three months ago. But the retrospectively published report will have made grim reading for Schmidt.

Among other things, the report says this:

“Many advertisers depend on Google’s search ad services and. . . the revenues derived from Google’s search ad intermediation make it an almost irreplaceable source of income for many publishers.”

The report also suggests that Google’s rivals “do not seem to be a real alternative”. That’s because — in the Commission’s eyes — Google possesses a “sufficient degree of market power to be able to foreclose rivals in the ad serving market”.

Irreplaceable source of income? Power to foreclose rivals? No real alternative? This is monopoly talk.

Just in case you were in any doubt about that, a Brussels-based lawyer called David Wood has been giving Business Week the benefit of his views on the document.

Wood believes that the European Commission has put Google “on effective notice that its behavior will now be measured as that of a dominant undertaking”. He adds:

“This has always not been about whether the transaction would be cleared but what would happen afterwards. The next phase is looking at the behavior of these companies [Google and Doublclick]; let’s see if their behavior is allowed by competition law standards.”

In passing, it’s worth noting that Wood works for a lobbying outfit called The Initiative for a Competitive Online Marketplace, or ICOMP for short.

ICOMP is an anti-Google lobbying front funded by Microsoft and run on a day-to-day basis by Burson-Marsteller, the PR agency.

Don’t let that make you too skeptical about Wood’s comments.

Instead, ask what exactly was going through Eric Schmidt’s mind when he decided to make nice with the ailing US newspaper industry this week.

As Eric Schmidt knows well, ICOMP represents Microsoft’s effort to use against Google exactly the same lobbying tools that he and his allies used against Microsoft in the 1990s.

With the insight of a poacher turned gamekeeper, Google’s boss knows precisely where this particular road leads. In Microsoft’s case, it led to the company being tied down by anti-trust actions that started in 1998 and continue to this day.

Not coincidentally, Google’s monopoly has been the subject of comments by interested onlookers such as Rupert Murdoch, Sly Bailey and Paul Myners in recent weeks.

For the moment, however, ICOMP’s list of supporters mostly remains a rag-bag of obscure European names, including hotel groups in Spain and ad agencies in Austria.

This is not yet the kind of broad front that creates big waves in Brussels. In the name of shareholder value, Google would to keep it that way — for as long as possible.

Better than anything else, this explains the paroxsym of pro-newspaper sentiment that seized Mr Schmidt this week.

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Weird scenes inside the goldmine: Johnston Press shares take a hammering

Posted by Peter Kirwan on 11 June 2008 at 23:59
Tags: Gannett, Johnston Press, Newsquest, Trinity Mirror

Shares in Johnston Press collapsed 17% today, continuing a rout that started yesterday. This takes them to around 50p — below the rights issue price of 53p.

The decline is way beyond the 6% decline experienced by Trinity Mirror today.

So is this the cue for a Bradford & Bingley-style crisis?

The short answer is no. Johnston’s shareholders have already signed off the rights issue. This means that Deutsche Bank is tied into underwriting the issue at 53p. If shareholders don’t buy additional shares at that price, then the bankers are obliged to do so.

This means that Tim Bowdler and Johnston Press will get their £212m.

In turn, this makes the recent rout of Johnston’s shares even more puzzling. In theory, the company now has the ability to strengthen its balance sheet. So why the panic?

Speculation is part of the answer. Up to 18% of Johnston’s shares are held by hedge funds and other short sellers — one of the largest proportions in the FTSE-250.

This week’s swoon is part of a classic pattern in which hedge funds short the stock and buy nil-paid rights at depressed values. Once this gamesmanship works its way through the system, Johnston Press shares should stage a partial comeback.

At Deutsche Bank, they’ve also noticed that the share price declines of the past 48 hours tend to accelerate in the afternoon. For what it’s worth, this suggests that US investors are piling out of Johnston Press.

It would make sense for US investors to be more worried than most about the intensely gloomy economic indicators emerging from the UK. Sitting in New York, it must be hard to avoid the thought that Britain is heading for a destination the US has already reached.

In the US, ad revenues at newspapers in hard-hit states like Florida and California are dropping by 30% YOY. Here, according to Johnston Press, the decline was more like 10% YOY by the end of Q1. These declines can only accelerate during Q2.

Today, there was an added factor in the mix: Gannett’s announcement that it has been forced to write down the value of its newspapers by $2.5bn-$3bn. In a move that may have been designed for US consumption, Gannett blamed the bulk of the carnage on Newsquest.

Fairly clearly, this won’t have helped Johnston Press.

Never mind. It could be worse. Today, the FT reported that shares in Barratt Developments, the housebuilder once patronized by Margaret Thatcher, have collapsed by more than 90% from their peak in February 2007.

By contrast, Johnston Press shares finished the day 85% off their 52-week high of 329p.

We’re getting near the bottom. But there’s a way to go yet.

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Newsquest in Scotland: How much profit is enough?

Posted by Peter Kirwan on 8 May 2008 at 19:53
Tags: Gannett, Media, Newsquest, Trinity Mirror

Nothing like the threat of strike action to set the pulse racing. Especially in Glasgow.

In Scotland’s interesting metropolis, they’re breathing fire over Newsquest’s proposal to cut 40 jobs at the Glasgow Evening Times, the Herald and Sunday Herald.

There’s talk of “disastrous impact”, and an allegation that Gannett-owned Newsquest is “squeezing the very life out of some of Scotland’s most famous titles”.

Why? In order to line the “pockets of US shareholders”, of course.

Unfortunately, many of those “US shareholders” are public sector workers in places like California and Idaho. Their meagre pension funds just happen to be invested in companies like Gannett.

But that’s hardly relevant.

Instead, we’re struck by NUJ president James Doherty’s suggestion that the Herald has cut its editorial staff from 186 to 113 during the past five years.

That’s “despite the Glasgow papers making Newsquest £17.1m” during the same period.

Now these sound like intriguing numbers — all the more so because parent company Gannett’s accounts tell us very little about the performance of the company’s UK papers.

(What we do know, from Gannett’s most recent quarterly filing, is that sterling-denominated ad revenues at the company’s sprawling UK operations fell by 7%, with publishing revenues down by 6%. Whether the Herald or Insurance Times or someone else is to blame for this is a moot point, but the Q1 YOY declines in newspaper-related classified ads at Newsquest do look particularly nasty. Try a 21% YOY decline in revenue from car ads, and a 14% decline in property ads — a lot worse than Trinity Mirror’s Q1 regional results).

So Mr. Doherty, if you’ve got further and better particulars, we’d be delighted to hear them.

Is Newsquest supporting its beleaguered US business by cutting costs out of successful Scottish newspapers? Or are the cuts really a response to declining indigenous profitability?

Let’s not be bashful: we think we should told.

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Why Swiss Tony needs a digital camera from Santa

Posted by Peter Kirwan on 29 November 2007 at 13:43
Tags: Guardian Media Group, Media, Newsquest, Trinity Mirror

Fish4cars, the Trinity-Guardian-Newsquest classified site, is supposed to make life easier for the Swiss Tonys of the world.

Sometimes, however, the temptation to slap one’s customers becomes very great.

So it was that Fish4 issued a press release this week claiming that second hand car dealers are wasting 37m a year on digital classifieds that aren’t accompanied by photos or basic information (such as a vehicle’s door count).

Now 37m is a big number: according to Fish4Cars, it’s around one-third of the UK market (we guess we’re talking about the UK market for online auto classifieds here).

“A large proportion of retailers aren’t using their resources in the most appropriate way,” said Fish4cars sales director Colin Mathieson. “They are making basic errors when it comes to their adverts.”

It’s rare for media owners to blame their customers en masse (and publicly) for poor response rates. Typically, the temptation only becomes overwhelming In the face of large amounts of unpaid bills.

Is it possible that Fish4 could be facing payment problems on one-third of its revenues? Surely not. . .