Evening Standard

Book boom brings Bloomsbury record

- PUBLISHING Joanna Hodgson @ES_Joanna1

READERS are turning to books as an affordable treat in challengin­g economic times, Bloomsbury Publishing said today as it revealed its “best ever” annual financial performanc­e.

The Harry Potter publishing house said consumers have been cutting back “on more expensive forms of diversion”, and chief executive Nigel Newton added that “people are marching into book shops all over the world” post-pandemic.

Recent hits have included Sarah J Maas’ titles, and A Day of Fallen Night by Samantha Shannon and Bake by Paul Hollywood have been among bestseller­s.

In the year to February 28 sales rose 15% to £264.1 million and profits before tax and highlighte­d items jumped 16% to £31.1 million. The company had told the City in March it expected those figures to respective­ly be more than £260 million and some £30 million.

Jocelyn Paulley, retail and technology partner at law firm Gowling WLG, said: “It’s clear that the cost of living crisis is making consumers choose more inexpensiv­e pastimes as they combat high energy bills and inflation, with non-fiction books in particular providing an alternativ­e reality.”

Bloomsbury, which has an academic division for universiti­es and provides e-book collection­s, saw its non-consumer division’s revenue grow 19%.

Newton, who founded the firm in London in 1986, said: “These results demonstrat­e the strength of our strategy to publish for both the consumer and the academic markets, unusual in our industry, and to grow digital revenues while expanding globally.”

The board has proposed a 10% increase in its final dividend to 10.34p per share.

 ?? ?? Bestseller­s: readers are turning to books for cheap entertainm­ent in hard times
Bestseller­s: readers are turning to books for cheap entertainm­ent in hard times

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