The Guardian (Charlottetown)

A $52M deal

Media company to go private after sale to NordStar Capital

- VANMALA SUBRAHANIA­M

TORONTO — Torstar Corp., the parent company of the Toronto Star and a host of other media properties across Canada, is being sold to NordStar Capital LP, a private firm owned by businessme­n Paul Rivett and Jordan Bitove, in a $52 million deal, Torstar announced Tuesday evening.

Upon completion of the transactio­n, the company is expected be taken private.

“Since its inception as the Evening Star, the Star has been the voice of this city. As Canada’s largest daily newspaper, it has fulfilled a vital civic role as an outlet for expert opinion and what’s trusted as true,” Rivett said in a statement.

According to the statement, NordStar has indicated that former Ontario premier David Peterson will be appointed as vice chair of the Toronto Star once the deal closes.

Under terms of the deal, Bitove and Rivett will acquire all Class A shares and Class B non-voting shares of Torstar for 63 cents per share — a 67 per cent premium to the 20day volume-weighted average trading price of the Class B shares as of May 25.

Torstar stock fell 17 per cent Tuesday, to close at 40 cents, roughly the same price at which it traded when the COVID-19-induced economic shutdown began two-and-ahalf months ago.

“We believe in news. With this transactio­n we can ensure a future for world-class journalist­s and world-class journalism befitting the Star’s storied history,” Bitove said in Tuesday’s press release. “We are committed to investing in the news business, along with preserving the Atkinson Principles, as fairness and accuracy will continue to guide the papers’ prevailing value system.”

The transactio­n was supported by the media company’s largest independen­t shareholde­r, Fairfax Financial, which owns roughly 40 per cent of Torstar’s nonvoting Class B shares.

Rivett was at Fairfax Financial for 17 years, seven as president, before retiring in February, although he has remained chairman of several Fairfax investees, including Recipe Unlimited and Fairfax Africa.

A meeting of all Class A and Class B shareholde­rs will be called in mid-July to approve the transactio­n, and the deal is expected to close by the fall of 2020.

“We salute, without hesitation, the huge contributi­on of thousands of employees who have worked over the years to make Torstar so great. However, we have also come to realize that for Torstar to succeed now, it requires new ownership with both resources and determinat­ion,” wrote John Honderich, chairman of the company and a member of one of the five founding families of the newspaper chain, in a Toronto Star op-ed.

“We have tried to innovate and adopt new strategies to succeed in this new world … but quite frankly, it has been an uphill struggle.”

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