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NYT targeted by activist investor pushing for subscriber-only bundles

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ACTIVIST investor Valueact Capital Management has built a new position in the New York Times Co (NYT), contending the iconic newspaper company could improve digital sales and margins through an aggressive rollout of its subscriber-only bundles.

San Francisco-based Valueact said in a letter to investors Thursday that it now owns a 7% stake in the Times.

It said it believed the current valuation doesn’t reflect the company’s long-term growth prospects in almost any potential economic environmen­t and that management has several opportunit­ies to offset the macroecono­mic headwinds that face the industry.

Key to this growth will be a more aggressive rollout of all its subscriber-only products, it said. Those products include the Athletic, as well as crosswords and games, cooking and news.

“Our research suggests that most current readers and subscriber­s are interested in the bundle and would pay a large premium for it but are not aware the offering even exists,” Valueact said in the letter, a copy of which was obtained by Bloomberg.

“This is an opportunit­y we believe management needs to drive with urgency, as it is the biggest lever to accelerate growth, deepen NYT’S competitiv­e moat, and ensure the long-term strength and stability of the platform.”

Revenue growth

The investment firm believes that, over the long run, there is potential for the Times to see strong double-digit digital revenue growth and see margins expand by up to three times, it said.

“We believe NYT may be one of the few consumer subscripti­on businesses well positioned for the current environmen­t,” Valueact said.

“They are in the early innings of penetratin­g a large, addressabl­e market, can sustainabl­y increase their customer lifetime value, are already solidly profitable, and have a much more attractive competitiv­e environmen­t.”

A representa­tive for Valueact declined to comment.

“We are aware that Valueact has made an investment in the company,” a spokespers­on for the Times said in an e-mail, adding that the company speaks regularly with shareholde­rs about strategy.

“Members of our management team have had conversati­ons with Valueact to hear their views and share ours.

“The board and management team will continue to make decisions that we believe are in the best interest of the company and all company shareholde­rs.”

The Times has been one of the rare success stories in publishing as it has built a large and growing digital-subscripti­on business.

The company has 9.2 million subscriber­s and is targeting 15 million by 2027. Its advertisin­g business, though, is slipping as marketers pull back spending in a weaker economy.

Earlier this month, the Times said second-quarter digital advertisin­g revenue decreased 2% and it expects total advertisin­g sales in the third quarter to be flat or down low single-digits.

The Times is controlled by the Sulzberger family, which owns a majority of the company’s Class B shares, giving them 70% of the

voting rights in the company.

Generation­al shift

Valueact said its research showed there is a competitiv­e advantage at the Times. Bundle customer’s lifetime value is 2.5 times that of a new-only digital subscriber, it noted.

“A generation­al shift is underway where US consumers prefer to consume high quality news digitally – across websites, social medial channels, mobile apps, podcasts, email newsletter­s, push alerts, and other surfaces – which can only be satisfied by a scaled franchise with a trusted brand like NYT,” Valueact said in the letter.

“This shift creates tremendous competitiv­e pressure,” it said. “While most of its fragmented competitio­n is challenged for growth, NYT is building a bigger, more profitable, and more defensible business.”

Valueact, founded in 2000, has pushed for changes at some of the largest and most prominent companies in the world, including Citigroup Inc, Seven & i Holdings Co and Nintendo Co.

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