Bangkok Post

Tribune ends talks with rival bidder

- KATIE ROBERTSON

Tribune Publishing Co said on Monday that it had ended talks to sell itself to Newslight, a company set up last month by Maryland hotel executive Stewart W. Bainum Jr and Swiss billionair­e Hansjörg Wyss, after Wyss withdrew from a planned offer Friday.

Tribune Publishing’s special committee, which evaluates bids, said in a news release that the Newslight plan could no longer reasonably be expected to lead to a ‘superior proposal’ than the binding agreement the company had reached in February with Alden Global Capital, a New York hedge fund.

Bainum and Wyss had swooped in last month with a proposal of $18.50 per Tribune share, beating out the bid from Alden, which was for $17.25 a share.

The pathway to a deal involving Bainum, the chief executive of Choice Hotels, one of the world’s largest hotel chains, is not completely blocked.

In a letter on Saturday, Bainum informed the Tribune board of Wyss’ exit from a potential deal, adding that he remained committed to a proposal at $18.50 a share, after examining the company’s finances and discussing a possible agreement with other potential backers.

“I remain confident that there is significan­t interest in joining this effort and expect the necessary arrangemen­ts among one or more additional equity financing sources can be completed expeditiou­sly,” Bainum wrote in the letter.

He declined to comment for this article.

Tribune’s special committee said in its statement on Monday that it would “carefully consider any further developmen­ts in order to determine the course of action that is in the best interest of Tribune and its stockholde­rs, subject to the terms of the Alden merger agreement.”

The committee added that, in keeping with a previous recommenda­tion, its board would advise company stockholde­rs to vote in favour of the Alden deal.

Tribune, the publisher of The Chicago Tribune, The Baltimore Sun, The New York Daily News and other metropolit­an newspapers across the country, has been the target of Alden, its largest shareholde­r, since last year.

Because Alden is known for slashing costs at the roughly 60 daily newspapers it controls through its MediaNews Group subsidiary, journalist­s at Tribune publicatio­ns cheered the surprise entry of Bainum and Wyss into the bidding.

Alden has said it allows newspapers that might otherwise fold in a struggling industry to remain in business.

Tribune shareholde­rs are expected to vote on a buyer this summer, after the board formally approves an offer. ©2021

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