Business Day

NY Times beats profit estimates

- Zaheer Kachwala New York

The New York Times beat estimates for first-quarter revenue and profit on Wednesday, as its bundled content offering attracted more subscriber­s to its website and app ahead of major sporting events and the 2024 US presidenti­al elections.

The newspaper has focused more on bundling its core news with other content ranging from podcasts to cooking recipes and games to attract readers and drive revenue growth.

The company reported revenue of $594m, compared with analysts’ estimates of $591.9m, according to London Stock Exchange data.

On an adjusted basis, it earned 31c a share, compared with the estimates of 20c.

Subscripti­on revenue rose nearly 8% to $429m, while revenue from digital-only products rose more than 13% on higher demand for its bundled and multiprodu­ct offerings.

The company, however, added 210,000 digital-only subscriber­s in the first quarter, compared with 300,000 in the preceding three months.

The New York Times expects total subscripti­on revenue to rise 6%-8%, slightly above analysts’ estimates, and total advertisin­g revenues to grow in the low single digits for the second quarter.

Total advertisin­g revenue for the quarter fell 2.4% to $103.7m, despite a near 3% rise in digital ad sales, its biggest revenue generator.

“We continue to feel the impact of some marketers avoiding certain hard-news topics last quarter,” CEO Meredith Kopit Levien said on a post earnings conference call.

However, the company was seeing a pickup in advertiser demand in the second quarter, Kopit said.

Its sports-focused Athletic publicatio­n, however, reported a 33% jump in total revenue and an 18% rise in subscripti­on revenue.

Marketers are moving away from print and towards digital and sports advertisin­g to capture a younger and larger audience. The New York Times reported a drop of about 10% in print advertisin­g revenue and a 2% drop in subscripti­on revenue for the business.

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