The Denver Post

New suitor may enter fray for purchasing Tribune Publishing

- By Marc Tracy

A deal that would reshape the American newspaper industry has run into complicati­ons just one month after an agreement was reached, according to three people with knowledge of the matter. As a result, New York hedge fund Alden Global Capital may have to fend off a new suitor for Tribune Publishing, the chain that owns major metropolit­an dailies across the country, including The Chicago Tribune, The Daily News in New York and The Baltimore Sun, the people said.

On Feb. 16, Alden, the largest shareholde­r in Tribune Publishing, with a 32% stake, reached an agreement to buy the rest of the chain in a deal that valued the company at $630 million. In the deal, Alden would take ownership of all the Tribune Publishing papers — and then spin off the Sun and two smaller Maryland papers at a price of $65 million to a nonprofit organizati­on controlled by Maryland hotel magnate Stewart W. Bainum Jr.

In recent days, Bainum and Alden have found themselves at loggerhead­s over details of the operating agreements that would be in effect as the Maryland papers transition­ed from one owner to another, the people said. In response, Bainum has taken a preliminar­y step toward making a bid for all of Tribune Publishing, the people said.

Bainum has asked the Tribune Publishing special committee, a group made up of three independen­t board members, for permission to be released from a nondisclos­ure agreement prohibitin­g him from discussing the deal, so that he would be able to pursue partners for a new bid, the people said.

A spokespers­on for Bainum said he had no comment. Through a spokespers­on, Tribune Publishing’s special committee declined to comment. An Alden spokespers­on had no comment.

Alden has invested in the newspaper business for more than a decade. It owns around 60 dailies, including The Denver Post and The San Jose Mercury News, through a subsidiary, MediaNews Group. Its deal to acquire the rest of Tribune Publishing would make it an even greater force in the news media industry, by some measures the secondlarg­est newspaper company after Gannett, the company that publishes onefifth of all American newspapers, including USA Today.

Journalist­s have criticized Alden for deep costcuttin­g at its newspapers, often through laying off journalist­s and shrinking its local news coverage. Over the past year, journalist­s at several Tribune papers have led public campaigns urging local benefactor­s to buy the newspapers that employ them so that they would not fall under the hedge fund’s control. Alden maintains that it is the rare company that keeps local newspapers from going out of business.

The Alden-Tribune deal requires the approval of the shareholde­rs who own the roughly two-thirds of Tribune Publishing stock not owned by Alden. The largest holder of those shares, with a nearly 25% overall stake, is Patrick SoonShiong, the biotech billionair­e who owns The Los Angeles Times with his wife, Michele B. Chan. SoonShiong, who owns enough of Tribune Publishing to veto the deal himself, has declined to comment on the agreement between Alden and Tribune. He declined to comment Sunday on Bainum’s plan.

If Bainum manages to reach an agreement to buy Tribune, he would be likely to seek local owners for its other newspapers, which also include The Hartford Courant, The Orlando Sentinel and The South Florida Sun Sentinel, the people said.

Two of the people said Bainum, who resides in a Maryland suburb of Washington, was prepared to put up $100 million for a bid and then seek additional investment­s from others. Since 1997 Bainum has been the chairman of Choice Hotels, a multibilli­on-dollar public company that owns the Comfort Inn, Quality Inn and MainStay Suites brands, a company that grew out of his father’s business.

Alden has sought full ownership of Tribune Publishing since 2019, when it revealed that it had bought its 32% stake. Last year, it failed to reach an agreement to buy the rest of the company with a bid that valued the total company at $520 million.

Tribune announced last month that it held $99 million in cash at the end of 2020. It also announced in December the sale of a majority-owned subsidiary for $160 million.

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