The Denver Post

Shareholde­rs reject hedge fund’s board candidates

- By Jonathan O’Connell

Shareholde­rs of the Gannett newspaper chain backed all eight of the company’s board candidates Thursday, turning away an attempt by New York hedge fund Alden Global Capital and its media company to populate the board with its own candidates.

The vote, completed at Gannett’s annual meeting in McLean, Va., amounted to a rejection of Alden’s Media News Group — possibly a final one — of Alden’s attempt to acquire Gannett through a hostile takeover launched in January.

Board chairman John Jeffry Louis pumped his fist after the vote to applause from the company’s board members and employees in the company’s auditorium.

Gannett issued a statement afterward, saying the outcome “demonstrat­es that Gannett shareholde­rs recognize the continued progress we have made toward” transition­ing Gannett’s 100-plus newspapers, including USA Today, into predominan­tly digital businesses. In Colorado, Gannett owns The Coloradoan in Fort Collins.

MNG, formerly known as Digital First, initially proposed six board candidates, later narrowing it to three, including Heath Freeman, Alden’s president. Alden owns 7.5 percent of Gannett’s stock and controls more than 100 local newspapers, including The Denver Post.

An investigat­ion by The Washington Post found that Alden has cut jobs more rapidly than other newspaper owners, monetized real estate assets and come under federal investigat­ion for its management of pension funds.

Freeman did not attend the meeting. Consultant Bruce Goldfarb attended in Freeman’s place but declined to comment.

MNG issued a statement after the vote, saying: “This is a win for an entrenched Gannett board that has been unwilling to address the current realities of the newspaper business and sadly a loss for Gannett and its shareholde­rs.”

A spokeswoma­n for the company declined to comment on whether MNG would continue to pursue the acquisitio­n.

When MNG proposed buying Gannett, for $12 per share, it sparked concerns about how many more reporters at Gannett newspapers might lose their jobs should MNG employ the same cost-cutting methods it has elsewhere.

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer wrote to Freeman in February with concerns about how Alden would manage Gannett newspapers.

Sen. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, said in an interview last week that he opposed the takeover and was urging his colleagues to speak against it as well so that Gannett papers — including a dozen in Ohio — can “serve their communitie­s and keep politician­s and businesses honest.”

He said local reporters were particular­ly important at a time when President Donald Trump has made a habit of demonizing journalist­s.

“We see the disrespect that the president shows toward the media generally; you see that on a national level,” Brown said. “If these papers seem more distant to the reading public, I think more politician­s and businesses will follow the president’s lead with his disrespect to the media.”

Media companies focused on producing original journalism continue to suffer myriad economic maladies.

The biggest newspaper in New Orleans, 182 years old, recently laid off all of its staff. Warren Buffett, a bullish newspaper investor for decades who owns about 30 today, said recently that virtually all such publicatio­ns are “toast.” Even some of the most promising online-only outlets have laid off workers this year.

Gannett reported that it has more than 500,000 digital-only subscriber­s and has increased the share of its revenue from digital advertisin­g and subscripti­ons.

But its stock price remains roughly where it was two years ago — and some analysts believe it will have to continue cutting costs and possibly combine with another company in order to survive.

Union leaders backed Gannett’s board candidates.

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