Bangkok Post

Owner of Daily Mirror scoops up Express and Star titles

- KATE HOLTON

LONDON: Daily Mirror publisher Trinity Mirror Plc scooped up titles including the Daily Express, Daily Star and OK! magazine for £127 million ($177 million) yesterday in the biggest shake-up of Britain’s cut-throat newspaper industry in decades.

The takeover by Britain’s largest news publisher unites tabloids from opposite ends of the political spectrum, and with conflictin­g views on Brexit, to create a company better able to cope with readers and advertiser­s moving online.

“It’s a challengin­g industry, that’s why we need to come together,” Trinity chief executive Simon Fox told Reuters.

“There is a lot of life left in print and there are a lot of opportunit­ies in digital but no one is saying it’s going to be easy,” Fox said, adding he did not expect the deal to face major regulatory issues.

Trinity Mirror’s stable already includes more than 260 national and regional titles including the Daily Record, the Manchester Evening News, the Liverpool Echo and Birmingham Mail.

Billionair­e Express owner Richard Desmond, who made his fortune publishing adult titles such as the British edition of Penthouse, will get an 8.6% stake in Trinity and £107 million in cash under the terms of the deal.

Fox said the editors of the individual titles would retain editorial control over their political output, with the Express free to pursue its support for Brexit and the Mirror able to criticise the government’s handling of the EU departure.

“The Mirror is not going to go right wing, the Express is not going to go left,” Fox said.

Trinity Mirror said it planned to save £20 million in annual costs by 2020 by cutting back-office jobs and sharing editorial teams in sport and features.

Its shares jumped 12% on the announceme­nt, which was accompanie­d by an upbeat trading statement showing that the company had paid down debt and was on track to beat forecasts.

Both the Daily Mirror and the Express have seen their circulatio­n tumble in recent years, forcing them to slash costs and invest in their online sites to remain profitable.

While other media owners have sold out of newspapers in recent years, such as Pearson Plc selling the Financial Times and Rupert Murdoch putting his newspapers in a separate company, Trinity Mirror has doubled down on the industry.

Fox, who took over the company in 2012 after running music retailer HMV, has stripped out costs, shared content across its many titles and bought smaller rivals.

He said the acquisitio­n would be materially earnings enhancing in the first full year of ownership and give the larger group a more robust source of income based on circulatio­n revenue rather than the more volatile advertisin­g.

The combined group will have a digital audience of 234 million monthly unique browsers, excluding those on apps.

In areas such as sport, the new group will increase its coverage by assigning one reporter to cover a match for multiple titles, freeing up other reporters.

 ??  ?? The two newspaper titles owned by Express Newspapers alongside The Mirror newspaper, which is owned by Trinity Mirror, are seen on display in a newsagent in central London yesterday.
The two newspaper titles owned by Express Newspapers alongside The Mirror newspaper, which is owned by Trinity Mirror, are seen on display in a newsagent in central London yesterday.

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