| Mon, May 04, 2009 |
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Earnings: AH Belo’s Loss Widens; Revenues Fall 20 Percent
Losses at newspaper publisher AH Belo (NYSE: AHC) (NYSE: BLC) grew considerably in the first quarter, to $103.1 million ($5.03 per share) from $8.7 million ($0.43 per share) a year ago, mostly on writedowns and the devastating advertising climate. It it hadn’t been hit by special charges, the owner of the Dallas Morning News and Rhode Island’s Providence Journal would have lost $18.1 million ($0.91 per share). The company recalled that in January it said it was cutting 500 jobs—about 14 percent of AH Belo’s workforce—in a bid to save $27 million. But so far, it can do little to stop the downward spiral in ad revenues, which, including print and online, fell 28.2 percent. The company, which is separate from its broadcast sibling Belo Corp., said that it experienced ad declines in all its markets in Q1.
Earnings release| Webcast (12:30 PM EDT)
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paidContent.org
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Earnings: AH Belo’s Loss Widens; Revenues Fall 20 Percent
Losses at newspaper publisher AH Belo (NYSE: AHC) (NYSE: BLC) grew considerably in the first quarter, to $103.1 million ($5.03 per share) from $8.7 million ($0.43 per share) a year ago, mostly on writedowns and the devastating advertising climate. It it hadn’t been hit by special charges, the owner of the Dallas Morning News and Rhode Island’s Providence Journal would have lost $18.1 million ($0.91 per share). The company recalled that in January it said it was cutting 500 jobs—about 14 percent of AH Belo’s workforce—in a bid to save $27 million. But so far, it can do little to stop the downward spiral in ad revenues, which, including print and online, fell 28.2 percent. The company, which is separate from its broadcast sibling Belo Corp., said that it experienced ad declines in all its markets in Q1.
Earnings release| Webcast (12:30 PM EDT)
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| Thu, Apr 30, 2009 |
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Earnings: Belo Returns To Profitability, As Online Ad Revenue Dips 5.4 Percent
After reporting widening losses in Q4, Dallas broadcaster Belo (NYSE: BLC) posted a slight profit of $8.9 million ($0.09 per share), versus last year’s $0.11 per share loss. That return to profitability had a great deal to do with the fact that Belo did not have any costs related to the company’s spin-off into a broadcast side and a newspaper publisher, which is known as AH Belo (NYSE: AHC) and trades separately. Still, the company’s debt stands at $1.078 billion, though it was able to reduce that amount by $15 million since the the start of the year. In the meantime, the recession pounded away at revenues, as total revenue fell 23.6 percent to $133 million. Ad revenue from to Belo’s broadcast-related websites decreased 5.4 percent to $6.5 million, which represents 5 percent of total revs. Belo President Dunia A. Shive (pictured, right) said the online revenues for Q2 are trending flat so far, while the rest of this quarter resembles Q1 fairly closely.
Earnings release | Webcast 2:00 PM EDT
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paidContent.org
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Earnings: Belo Returns To Profitability, As Online Ad Revenue Dips 5.4 Percent
After reporting widening losses in Q4, Dallas broadcaster Belo (NYSE: BLC) posted a slight profit of $8.9 million ($0.09 per share), versus last year $0.11 per share loss. That return to profitability had a great deal to do with the fact that Belo did not have any costs related to the spinoff of the company into a broadcast side and a newspaper publisher, which is known as AH Belo (NYSE: AHC) and trades separately. Still, the company’s debt stands at $1.078 billion, though it was able to reduce that amount by $15 million since the the start of the year. In the meantime, the recession pounded away at revenues, as total revenue fell 23.6 percent to $133 million. Ad revenue from to Belo’s broadcast-related websites decreased 5.4 percent to $6.5 million, which represents 5 percent of total revs. Dunia A. Shive, Belo’s president said the online revenues for Q2 are trending flat so far, while the rest of this quarter resembles Q1 fairly closely.
Earnings release | Webcast 2:00 PM EDT
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| Thu, Apr 02, 2009 |
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A.H. Belo Cuts Salaries, Suspends Pension Contributions; Journal Comm Slices Pay 6 Percent
A.H. Belo (NYSE: AHC) (NYSE: BLC) CEO and chairman Robert Decherd has issued a new around of cost-cutting measures across its four newspapers, including wage reductions and suspending contributions to employee pension plans, Dallas Morning News reported (via Romenesko). The company, which owns the DMN and Rhode Island’s Providence Journal, hopes to save $10 million from salary cuts. Mindful of the spotlight on executive pay these days, Decherd made a point of noting that he will take a 20 percent pay cut. Other wages will be cut according to a sliding scale that tops out at 15 percent for those earning more than $225,000 to 2.5 percent for staffers making between $25,001 and $74,999. Those taking home $25,000 or less will not be cut. The salary reductions go into affect on May 1. The pay cuts follow similar actions taken recently to deal with mounting costs and declining profits at E.W. Scripps (NYSE: SSP) and NYTCo (NYSE: NYT).
—Journal Comm slashes pay 6 percent: The owner of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel will be cutting non-union staffers’ wages by 6 percent, the paper reported. In another sign of the times, unions are under greater pressure to absorb some of the cost-saving measures as well. Journal Comm plans to ask union members to make some concessions as well. In particular, Journal Comm has specifically told the union that it needs to cut $1.2 million in annual payroll. More after the jump
A.H. Belo’s decision to suspend matching contributions to the 2009 pension supplement, which would normally be made in 2010, will save about $6 million in cash next year. The company still plans to make its 2008 contribution to the plan by October 15, 2009. A.H. Belo, not to be confused with its broadcast sibling Belo Corp., has been experiencing revenue declines on the online side lately as well as the print side, though it has been banking on its arrangement with the Yahoo (NSDQ: YHOO) Newspaper Consortium to help offset those losses. In Q4, the Dallas-based publisher posted a $33.1 million ($1.62 per share) net loss, narrowing down from last year’s $343.6 million
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