Kuwait Times

Gannett to merge with GateHouse

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WASHINGTON: USA Today publisher Gannett agreed to a merger Monday with rival GateHouse in a deal creating the largest US newspaper group, aiming for bigger scale to face the challenges of the troubled sector. GateHouse parent New Media Investment Group will buy Gannett in a cash-and-stock transactio­n valued at around $1.4 billion that creates a media company with 263 dailies and reaching 145 million customers.

Michael Reed, New Media chairman and chief executive, said he expects the deal “will transform the landscape in the print and digital news business” and help the firms accelerate the transforma­tion to digital. The combined company will operate under the Gannett brand, with former Bloomberg and Dow Jones executive Paul Bascobert named chief executive in the deal, expected to close before the end of the year.

Jeffry Louis, chairman of the Gannett board, said the tie-up could help the publishers “leverage the combined company’s enhanced scale and financial strength to continue to drive growth in the digital future.” Under the deal, New Media will offer stock and cash worth $12.06 per Gannett share and New Media shareholde­rs will hold approximat­ely 50.5 percent of the combined company.

The deal comes with the newspaper sector mired in an extended slump as consumers and advertiser­s shift to digital platforms. According to a recent Pew Research Center survey, newspaper circulatio­n has fallen to its lowest level since 1940, even accounting for online readership. A separate report by the University of North Carolina last year found some 1,800 local US newspapers, including many weeklies, had failed since 2004, leaving many communitie­s as “news deserts.”

Gannett earlier this year fended off a hostile takeover bid from hedge fund-backed Digital First Media, and in 2016 failed to seal a deal to combine with Tribune Publishing, another newspaper chain. GateHouse operates in numerous small- and medium-sized markets, with newspapers including the Austin American-Statesman in Texas, Providence Journal in Rhode Island and the Akron Beacon Journal in Ohio. Will cost-savings help?

A joint statement said the Gannett-GateHouse deal could help realize cost savings of $275 million to $300 million annually. Yet whether the tie-up will reinvigora­te the news business in the communitie­s they serve remains an open question.

“There’s certainly strength in numbers and the companies have fairly similar cultures and a commitment to local journalism,” said Ken Paulson, a former USA Today editor who is now on the faculty at Middle Tennessee State University. “It’s also a plus for USA Today to be able to work with an even larger network of news organizati­ons. Sadly, though, this is largely a matter of buying time while searching for that still-elusive business model that will allow the newspaper business to stabilize.”

Jeff Jarvis, a professor at the City University of New York journalism school, said the new company needs a better vision more than cost savings. “Both Gannett and GateHouse have gone through considerab­le cost-cutting, and more cuts would be deleteriou­s to quality,” Jarvis said. “They need to see themselves not as a factory for content but a hub for service to the community. They have the scale to reinvent themselves. But if all they are going to do is to make their content cheaper and cheaper it’s not going to work.”

Dan Kennedy, a journalism professor at Northeaste­rn University who follows the newspaper sector, said it remains unclear whether the merger will be positive for local news coverage. “What’s more important with these combinatio­ns is the amount of debt they take on to finance the deal and that has to be paid off,” Kennedy said. “So I don’t think it’s good news for the communitie­s that they serve.”

 ?? — AFP ?? FLORIDA: A GateHouse Media owned Palm Beach Post and the Gannett Co owned USA Today are seen for sale at a newsstand in Palm Beach, Florida.
— AFP FLORIDA: A GateHouse Media owned Palm Beach Post and the Gannett Co owned USA Today are seen for sale at a newsstand in Palm Beach, Florida.

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