Los Angeles Times

Nikkei Inc. buys Financial Times for $1.3 billion

Owner Pearson sells the newspaper as it focuses on its core education business.

- By Dean Starkman dean.starkman @latimes.com

Pearson said it sold the unit that includes the Financial Times, one of the marquee names in English-language financial journalism, to Nikkei Inc. for $1.3 billion in cash.

The sale ends years of speculatio­n about the fate of the Financial Times, a rare success story in the search for journalism business models in the digital age but an awkward fit for Pearson as it focuses on its core edu- cation business.

“Pearson has been a proud proprietor of the FT for nearly 60 years,” John Fallon, Pearson’s chief executive, said in a statement Thursday. “But we’ve reached an inflection point in media, driven by the explosive growth of mobile and social. In this new environmen­t, the best way to ensure the FT’s journalist­ic and commercial success is for it to be part of a global, digital news company.”

Although a sale of the FT had been the subject of media chatter for years, the buyer took media circles by surprise. Tokyo-based Nikkei calls itself the largest independen­t business media group in Asia and owns an array of Asian-based financial and business publicatio­ns.

With its distinctiv­e salmon-colored newsprint, the Financial Times gained a foothold in the U.S. market with a big expansion in the late 1990s. It has gained acclaim for its internatio­nally focused journalism and, in recent years, for its success in transformi­ng from a print-only business model to a digitally driven one.

In 2007, it became one of the first papers to successful­ly implement a pay wall that allowed online readers access to a limited number of stories before requiring them to subscribe. By 2012, the FT had become the first paper to generate more revenue from digital sources than from print and more from subscripti­ons than from advertiser­s, reversing newspapers’ long-standing business model.

The FT said it has a combined paid print and digital circulatio­n of 737,000, an increase of 30% over the last five years, with digital circulatio­n growing to represent 70% of the total, from 24%.

Pearson’s FT Group also owns a 50% stake in the Economist magazine.

 ?? John Stillwell
Associated Press ?? KNOWN FOR ITS distinctiv­e salmon-colored newsprint, the Financial Times gained a foothold in the U.S. market with a big expansion in the late 1990s.
John Stillwell Associated Press KNOWN FOR ITS distinctiv­e salmon-colored newsprint, the Financial Times gained a foothold in the U.S. market with a big expansion in the late 1990s.

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