The Hamilton Spectator

Postmedia Q2 loss falls due to cost-cutting

- DAVID PADDON

TORONTO — Postmedia Network Canada Corp. says its net loss for the quarter ended Feb. 28 was reduced to $1.3 million, down from $28.5 million a year earlier, despite a continued decline in revenue at its newspaper operations.

The Toronto-based company, which owns the National Post and numerous other paper and digital publicatio­ns, says the reduced loss was mainly due to its cost reduction initiative­s and a tax credit from the Ontario government.

Postmedia’s operating expenses were down 21 per cent or $36.2 million, excluding certain items including restructur­ing expenses, and it received $17 million from the Ontario interactiv­e digital media tax credit.

The net loss was worth one cent per share, down from 28 cents per share a year earlier.

Those positives offset a 10.8 per cent decline in revenue to $157.6 million, which was down $19.1 million from last year’s fiscal second quarter.

Print advertisin­g revenue was down $16.3 million, or 18.8 per cent, while print circulatio­n revenue was down $4.6 million or 7.9 per cent.

Postmedia executive chair Paul Godfrey said in a statement that the revenue declines from its legacy business had slowed and there were “positive signs” from its digital advertisin­g initiative­s.

Digital revenue — which includes national and local display advertisin­g, classified advertisin­g on Postmedia’s newspaper and other websites such as canada.com and canoe.com, and subscripti­ons — totalled $26.4 million in the quarter, up 10.1 per cent from the same time last year.

Shortly after the quarter ended, the Competitio­n Bureau obtained a warrant to search one of Postmedia’s offices as part of an investigat­ion into an asset-swap with Torstar Corp., owner of the Toronto Star and other publicatio­ns.

No charges have been laid and the allegation­s included in the court documents have not been proven in court. Torstar and Postmedia have said they do not believe they contravene­d the Competitio­n Act and they are co-operating.

Under the agreement announced by the two companies in November, 41 newspapers changed hands and 36 were closed, mainly in Ontario regions served by multiple publicatio­ns. Nearly 300 jobs were cut as a result. In documents used by the bureau to obtain warrants to search several offices of the two companies, the watchdog alleged they conspired to divide up sales, territorie­s, customers and/or markets for advertisin­g or flyer distributi­on in certain regions. The bureau also said the companies had lists of which Torstar and which Postmedia employees would be terminated and agreed to a transition­al services agreement.

Postmedia said Wednesday that it had incurred $3.5 million of severance costs over the six months ended Feb. 28, mostly in its first quarter ended Nov. 30.

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