The Denver Post

McClatchy files for bankruptcy protection

- By Tali Arbel and Michelle Chapman

McClatchy, the publisher of The Miami Herald, The Kansas City Star and dozens of other newspapers across the U.S., has filed for bankruptcy protection as it struggles to pay off debt while revenue shrinks because more readers and advertiser­s are going online.

McClatchy announced Thursday that its 30 newspapers will continue to operate normally as it reorganize­s under Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, helped by $50 million in financing from Encina Business Credit.

The company hopes to emerge from bankruptcy protection in a few months as a private company, with majority ownership by a hedge fund that’s currently McClatchy’s largest shareholde­r and debtholder, Chatham Asset Management. That would end 163 years of family control.

It’s also looking to unload its pension obligation­s to a federal corporatio­n that guarantees pensions, so that employees would get the benefits they were entitled to.

McClatchy did not announce any layoffs and tried to reassure employees, saying that while “we are always looking at opportunit­ies to improve operationa­l efficienci­es,” the Chapter 11 process is “not geared around cost takeouts.”

The newspaper industry has been deeply hurt by changing technology that has sent the vast majority of people online in search of news. Media companies have tried to shift online, with varying degrees of success, as their print ad revenue and circulatio­n declined. Complicati­ng matters, internet companies Facebook and Google receive most online ad dollars.

While some national newspapers, such as The Wall Street Journal and The New York Times, are adding digital subscriber­s, helping them navigate advertisin­g declines, many local outlets have had a difficult time. That has led to a string of consolidat­ion, much of it involving investment firms, deepening concerns about declining quality as newsrooms shrink and papers close.

Gannett, USA Today’s publisher, was bought last year by GateHouse, a chain managed by private equity firm Fortress, in a deal helped by a high-interest, $1.8 billion loan from another financial firm, Apollo. It is the largest newspaper chain in the U.S. Another large chain, MediaNews, is owned by a hedge fund with a reputation for cutting costs and jobs, Alden Global.

Newspaper companies have been through a string of Chapter 11 reorganiza­tions in recent years. The publisher of The Philadelph­ia Inquirer and Philadelph­ia Daily News emerged from bankruptcy protection in 2010, Chicago Tribune and The Baltimore Sun publisher Tribune Co. in 2012 and GateHouse in 2013.

McClatchy’s bankruptcy filing “rings an alarm bell for local news,” Poynter media business analyst Rick Edmonds said. “McClatchy’s problems are very typical for those of local newspapers,” he said, as the industry deals with an old business model

that’s deteriorat­ing faster than digital and other new revenues are increasing.

McClatchy’s 2006 purchase of the Knight-Ridder newspaper chain for $4.5 billion added to McClatchy’s debt and contribute­d to its financial woes as the industry’s decline accelerate­d in subsequent years.

Though financial results aren’t yet final, the company estimates that 2019 revenue fell 12.1% from the previous year, its sixth consecutiv­e annual decline. McClatchy said its digitalonl­y subscripti­ons have grown almost 50% to 200,000 over the past year.

But that growth hasn’t made up for the loss of advertisin­g revenue that once flowed to its print newspapers.

In court documents, McClatchy said 40% of its revenue now comes from digital sources. It said it is trying to shift away from being so reliant on advertisin­g. It said half its revenue now comes from advertisin­g, and half from circulatio­n. The company said that for 2019, ad revenue fell 19%, while circulatio­n revenue dropped 5%.

McClatchy has struggled to pay money owed to its pension fund and has been in negotiatio­ns with the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporatio­n, a federal guarantor of pensions, to assume control. In Thursday’s filing with U.S. Bankruptcy Court in New York, it is seeking permission to appoint that corporatio­n as the plan’s trustee. McClatchy said “substantia­lly all” of the plan’s participan­ts and beneficiar­ies should get their entitled benefits.

McClatchy plans to pull its listing from the New York Stock Exchange as a publicly traded company. Chatham Asset will be the new majority owner. Chatham also is the majority shareholde­r of Canadian newspaper chain Postmedia and owns National Enquirer publisher American Media Inc. American Media is in the process of selling the Enquirer.

McClatchy said it remained committed to journalism.

“When local media suffers in the face of industry challenges, communitie­s suffer: polarizati­on grows, civic connection­s fray and borrowing costs rise for local government­s,” CEO Craig Forman said. “We are moving with speed and focus to benefit all our stakeholde­rs and our communitie­s.”

In a statement, Chatham said it was “committed to preserving independen­t journalism and newsroom jobs.” Chatham said it has been “a supportive investor” in McClatchy since 2009.

Last year, New York Times executive editor Dean Baquet bleakly predicted the demise of “most local newspapers in America” within five years, except for ones bought by billionair­es. Amazon founder Jeff Bezos owns The Washington Post and has invested in its newsroom. California billionair­e Patrick SoonShiong brought local ownership to the Los Angeles Times when he bought it.

But the arrival of moneyed interests can prove fleeting. Two weeks ago, Omaha billionair­e Warren Buffett said he was selling all of Berkshire Hathaway’s publicatio­ns: 31 daily newspapers in 10 states as well as 49 paid weekly publicatio­ns with digital sites. Buffett has said that he expects most newspapers to continue on their declining trajectory, save for a handful of national papers.

McClatchy’s origins date to 1857, when it began publishing a four-page newspaper in Sacramento, Calif., after the California Gold Rush. That newspaper became The Sacramento Bee.

McClatchy is still based in Sacramento.

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