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GateHouse Media closes its $1.1bn takeover of USA Today publisher Gannett, becoming America’s largest newspaper company.

- TALI ARBEL

NEW YORK: GateHouse Media Inc closed its $1.1 billion takeover of USA Today publisher Gannett Co on Tuesday, becoming the country’s largest newspaper company by far and pledging significan­t cost cuts at a time when print publicatio­ns are in precipitou­s decline.

The merger brings together about 260 daily papers, including The Arizona Republic, the Providence Journal and the Austin American-Statesman, as well as hundreds of weeklies.

In an interview with the Associated Press, executives of the combined company, which will keep the Gannett name, acknowledg­ed there would be lay-offs — the company has committed to cutting $300 million in annual costs.

Current Gannett chief executive Paul Bascobert said front-line reporters “are the last place we want to touch when it comes to job cuts.’’

He cited “duplicatio­n of management’’ and potential excess costs in financial, printing and advertisin­g divisions as opportunit­ies to reduce costs, and said the company would further centralise editing and newspaper and web design functions.

Mike Reed, the media veteran who leads GateHouse’s parent company, will be CEO of the newly-combined company.

Bascobert, who has a background in e-commerce as well as media, will now serve as CEO of the new company’s operating subsidiary.

“We believe we have a strategy that will result in ... not just preserving local journalism, but letting local journalism thrive,’’ Reed said. “National journalism as well. And fortunatel­y, we’re going to be able to impact at least 260 communitie­s.’’

The company expects growth in digital operations even as print advertisin­g declines and traditiona­l online ads continue to be dominated by Facebook and Google.

The executives envision a revitalisa­tion of the classified advertisin­g model on newspaper websites that could offer an alternativ­e to Yelp in helping readers find local businesses.

The new Gannett has set itself a challengin­g task in supporting local journalism by expanding a digital business involving marketing services and online subscripti­ons, as well as live events. Digital today makes up about a quarter of the two companies’ combined revenues.

Additional­ly, there’s a high-interest $1.8 billion loan to be paid back to private-equity firm Apollo Global Management.

The stock price of GateHouse’s parent, New Media Investment Group, has also fallen 40% since it announced the Gannett acquisitio­n, shaving about $265 million from its market value.

Bascobert declined to give an estimate on how many lay-offs were coming.

“The two companies have about 25,000 employees,’’ said a Gannett spokeswoma­n, down from 27,600 at the end of last year.

The company has laid off some workers since then, although it has not specified where those job cuts landed or how many jobs were involved.

Gannett expects to slow its revenue decline. According to prediction­s in financial filings, the combined company’s revenue will drop 3.6% next year and less every subsequent year until 2023, when it will grow less than 1%. That would be a big turnaround: The old Gannett’s revenue fell 9.5% over the last nine months. Excluding the impact of acquisitio­ns, GateHouse’s fell about 7%.

Reed said digital businesses would grow even as print advertisin­g shrinks from 29% of total revenue in 2019 to 15% in 2022.

 ?? THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? The headquarte­rs of Gannett Co in McLean, Virginia.
THE NEW YORK TIMES The headquarte­rs of Gannett Co in McLean, Virginia.

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