The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

BuzzFeed to become publicly traded company

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Digital media company BuzzFeed is setting its sights on growth. It plans to become a publicly traded company with an implied value of $1.5 billion through a merger with a special purpose acquisitio­n company.

BuzzFeed hopes the move will put it in a better position to capture lucrative digital ad dollars against much bigger rivals like Google, Facebook and Amazon.

The company, founded by Jonah Peretti in 2006 and initially known for listicles and online quizzes, has establishe­d itself as a serious contender in the news business, this year winning a Pulitzer for internatio­nal reporting. Its other brands include Tasty, the world’s largest social food network.

It has been buying up competitor­s, including HuffPost, the media outlet founded in 2005 as The Huffington Post, from Verizon Media in November. BuzzFeed said Thursday that it plans to buy Complex Networks from Verizon and Hearst for $300 million. Complex is a global youth network that engages with millennial­s and Gen Z.

Digital advertisin­g is a tough space to succeed in, and digital newsrooms have been consolidat­ing, including Vox’s purchase of New York Magazine and its digital arms. Facebook and Google get the majority of digital-ad dollars. In a statement, Peretti said the acquisitio­n of Complex would “open the door to even more revenue opportunit­ies.”

A number of companies this year have chosen a non-traditiona­l path to putting their shares on the public market, choosing to skip partnershi­ps with traditiona­l financial institutio­ns, and instead merging with a special purpose acquisitio­n company, or SPAC.

SPACs can cut up to 75% off the time it takes for a company to get its stock trading on an exchange, versus the traditiona­l process of an initial public offering. SPACs can also make it easier to get prospectiv­e buyers on board. Companies going the SPAC route often feel more license to highlight projection­s for big growth they’re expecting in the future, for example. In a traditiona­l IPO, the company is limited to highlighti­ng its past performanc­e, which may not be a great selling point for young startups that typically fail to put up big profits or revenue.

BuzzFeed, based in New York City, is merging with a SPAC called 890 Fifth Avenue Partners Inc.

 ?? TED SHAFFREY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The entrance to BuzzFeed in New York. BuzzFeed is merging with special purpose acquisitio­n company 890Fifth Avenue Partners Inc., and will become a publicly traded company. BuzzFeed said its implied valuation is $1.5 billion, once the transactio­n closes, which is expected in the fourth quarter.
TED SHAFFREY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The entrance to BuzzFeed in New York. BuzzFeed is merging with special purpose acquisitio­n company 890Fifth Avenue Partners Inc., and will become a publicly traded company. BuzzFeed said its implied valuation is $1.5 billion, once the transactio­n closes, which is expected in the fourth quarter.

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