During my stay in the DC area for close to a decade, I have read the Washington Post every day. There were other newspapers, but the obvious choice was to subscribe to the Washington Post.
Amazon.com Founder & CEO Jeff Bezos bought the prestigious signatory newspaper Washington Post from Washington Post Company [market cap of $4.38 billion at the time of this post] for $250 million – which translates to 0.5 times the annual revenue. A bargain indeed.
As of August 2013, Jeff Bezos is worth about $26 billion. Forbes ranks him as the 19th most wealthy man in the world, just ahead of Google’s Larry Page.
Bezoz is seen as a visionary. He founded Amazon in 1994 and defined ecommerce. In 2012, he predicted it was too late to persuade people to pay for news on the web.
Bezos is obsessed with building projects to survive over centuries. He builds for the sake of future scale. He has patience. All these qualities will come in handy with the Washington Post.
Jeff Bezos also has an interest in Business Insider [source geekwire.com].
Print newspapers in the US are struggling to survive, ad revenues fell 55% between 2007 and 2012 as ad dollars have shifted to the web. Waiting to see that kind of shift in India!
Washington Post’s circulation had fallen from 769,000 in 2002 to 472,000 in 2012. For the same period the revenue fell by 31% to $582 million. While the revenue sounds big but the newspaper made a loss of $53.7 million in 2012 (against a profit of $109 million in 2002).
Bezos could absorb $100 million a year in losses for 250 years before going broke!
New York Times sold Boston Globe for $70 million, which it had bought for $1.1 billion in 1993.
Few of the other acquisitions in the print media in the US,
Paper | Price | Acquirer | Date |
---|---|---|---|
Washington Post | $250 million | Jeff Bezos | August 2013 |
Boston Globe | $70 million | John Henry | 2013 |
Philadelphia Inquirer; Philadelphia Daily News | $55 million | Local Investors | 2012 |
Omaha World-Herald | $200 million | Warren Buffett | 2011 |
Newsday | $650 million | Cablevision | 2008 |
Minneapolis Star Tribune | $530 million | Avista Capital Partners | 2006 |
The transaction covers The Washington Post and other publishing businesses, including the Express newspaper, The Gazette Newspapers, Southern Maryland Newspapers, Fairfax County Times, El Tiempo Latino and Greater Washington Publishing.
Slate magazine, TheRoot.com and Foreign Policy are not part of the transaction and will remain with The Washington Post Company, as will the WaPo Labs and SocialCode businesses, the Company’s interest in Classified Ventures and specific real estate assets, including the headquarters building in downtown Washington, DC [source geekwire.com].
The Washington Post Company, which also owns Kaplan, Post–Newsweek Stations and Cable ONE, will change its name in connection with the transaction; no new name has yet been announced.
In 2010, Washington Post Co had already sold the famous weekly magazine Newsweek.
Bezos wrote an email to Washington Post Co Chairman Don E. Graham “If you’re interested, I am”.
This reminds me of the famous one-word SMS Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi sent to Ratan Tata, inviting him to shift the Nano car project from West Bengal to Gujarat – the SMS read “Swagatam.”
And one of the articles said “Jeff Bezos may want to run for President!”
Buying a successful newspaper in India is almost unthinkable for any digital property. Not happening shortly. The revenues of print is far greater than online revenue in India.
Another interesting read is the views of Anant Goenka of Indian Express Group. Just today, I came across the views of various players in media in India.
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I think *all* journalists are missing the hidden, but deeper opportunity -- because by definition, they are focussed on immediate news. There is a mysteriously hidden treasure -- nobody has yet figured it out -- but the truth remains that there is TREMENDOUS APPETITE FOR NEWS all over the world and the FIRST ONE to FIGURE IT OUT -- whether it is Apple, Google, NewYork Times or Bezos (potential contenders to crack the nut) will reap untold harvests. But you have to be a player now, because the window of opportunity is closing or has already closed. It makes sense to invest $100M for anybody (FoxNews, CNN, Yahoo) to be a player.