10 US Newspapers That Will Fold...

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FSTargetDrone
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10 US Newspapers That Will Fold...

Post by FSTargetDrone »

...Or go to an online-only format:
The 10 Major Newspapers That Will Either Fold or Go Digital Next

By 24/7 WALL ST. 24/7 Wall St.

Mon Mar 9, 12:30 pm ET

Over the last few weeks, the newspaper industry has entered a new period of decline. The parent of the papers in Philadelphia declared bankruptcy as did the Journal Register chain. The Rocky Mountain News closed and the Seattle Post Intelligencer, owned by Hearst, will almost certainly close or only publish online. Hearst has said it will also close The San Francisco Chronicle if it cannot make massive cuts at the paper. The most recent rumor is that the company will fire half of the editorial staff. That action still may not be enough to make the property profitable.

24/7 Wall St. has created its list of the ten major daily papers that are most likely to fold or shut their print operations and only publish online. The properties were chosen based on the financial strength of their parent companies, the amount of direct competition that they face in their markets, and industry information on how much money they are losing. Based on this analysis, it is possible that eight of the fifty largest daily newspapers in the United States could cease publication in the next eighteen months. (Read: "The Race for a Better Read")

1. The Philadelphia Daily News. The smaller of the two papers owned by The Philadelphia Newspapers LLC, which recently filed for bankruptcy. The parent company says it will make money this year, but with newspaper advertising still falling sharply, the city cannot support two papers and the Daily News has a daily circulation of only about 100,000. The tabloid has a small staff, most of whom could probably stay on at Philly.com, the web operation for both of the city dailies.

2. The Minneapolis Star Tribune has filed for Chapter 11. The paper may not make money this year even without the costs of debt coverage. The company said it made $26 million last year, about half of what it made in 2007. The odds are that the Star Tribune will lose money this year if its ad revenue drops another 20%. There is no point for creditors to keep the paper open if it cannot generate cash. It could become an all-digital property, but supporting a daily circulation of over 300,000 is too much of a burden. It could survive if its rival the St. Paul Pioneer Press folds. A grim race.

3. The Miami Herald, which has a daily circulation of about 220,000. It is owned by McClatchy, a publicly traded company which could be the next chain to go into Chapter 11. The Herald has been on the market since December, and but no serious bidders have emerged. Newspaper advertising has been especially hard hit in Florida because of the tremendous loss in real estate advertising. The online version of the paper is already well-read in the Miami area and Latin America and the Caribbean. The Herald has strong competition north of it in Fort Lauderdale. There is a very small chance it could merge with the Sun-Sentinel, but it is more likely that the Herald will go online-only with two editions, one for English-speaking readers and one for Spanish.

4. The Detroit News is one of two daily papers in the big American city badly hit by the economic downturn. It is unlikely that it can merge with the larger Detroit Free Press which is owned by Gannett. It is hard to see what would be in it for Gannett. With the fortunes of Detroit getting worse each day, cutting back the number of days that the paper is delivered will not save enough money to keep the paper open.

5. The Boston Globe is, based on several accounts, losing $1 million a week. One investment bank recently said that the paper is only worth $20 million. The paper is the flagship of what the Globe's parent, The New York Times, calls the New England Media Group. NYT has substantial financial problems of its own. Last year, ad revenue for the New England properties was down 18%. That is likely to continue or get worse this year. Supporting larger losses at the Globe will become nearly impossible. Boston.com, the online site that includes the digital aspects of the Globe, will probably be all that will be left of the operation.

6. The San Francisco Chronicle. Parent company Hearst has already set a deadline for shutting the paper if it cannot make tremendous cost cuts. The Chronicle lost as much as $70 million last year. Even if the company could lower its costs, the northern California economy is in bad shape. The online version of the paper could be the only version by the middle of the 2009.

7. The Chicago Sun Times is the smaller of two newspapers in the city. Its parent company, Sun-Times Media Group trades for $.03 a share. Davidson Kempner, a large shareholder in the firm, has dumped the CEO and most of the board. The paper has no chance of competing with The Chicago Tribune.

8. NY Daily News is one of several large papers fighting for circulation and advertising in the New York City area. Unlike The New York Times, New York Post, Newsday, and Newark Star Ledger, the Daily News is not owned by a larger organization. Real estate billionaire Mort Zuckerman owns the paper. Based on figures from other big dailies it could easily lose $60 million or $70 million and has no chance of recovering from that level

9. The Fort Worth Star Telegram is another one of the big dailies that competes with a larger paper in a neighboring market - Dallas. The parent of The Dallas Morning News, Belo, is arguably a stronger company that the Star Telegram's parent, McClatchy. The Morning News has a circulation of about 350,000 and the Star Telegram has just over 200,000. The Star Telegram will have to shut down or become an edition of its rival. Putting them together would save tens of millions of dollars a year.

10. The Cleveland Plain Dealer is in one of the economically weakest markets in the country. Its parent, Advance Publications, has already threatened to close its paper in Newark. Employees gave up enough in terms of concessions to keep the paper open. Advance, owned by the Newhouse family, is carrying the burden of its paper plus Conde Nast, its magazine group which is losing advertising revenue. The Plain Dealer will be shut or go digital by the end of next year.

- Douglas A. McIntyre
I'll miss the Daily News in Philadelphia, but only for the Sports coverage.

How about people elsewhere, not in the US? Has your newspaper closed, or is it in danger of doing so?
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aznewbie
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Re: 10 US Newspapers That Will Fold...

Post by aznewbie »

We have the Tucson Citizen about to shut down too.
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Re: 10 US Newspapers That Will Fold...

Post by erik_t »

Local feeling is that the Mpls Strib will gobble up everything and survive as an AP-less perhaps-all-digital new source. No source provided; that's just prevailing opinion IMHO.
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Re: 10 US Newspapers That Will Fold...

Post by Ziggy Stardust »

FSTargetDrone wrote:Hearst has said it will also close The San Francisco Chronicle if it cannot make massive cuts at the paper. The most recent rumor is that the company will fire half of the editorial staff. That action still may not be enough to make the property profitable.
I'm surprised they are in that desperate of financial straits, as I was under the impression that they were floating along okay.
FSTargetDrone wrote:The properties were chosen based on the financial strength of their parent companies, the amount of direct competition that they face in their markets, and industry information on how much money they are losing.
To be fair, the financial strength of the parent company is not always a good indicator to go by. The Tribune Company declared bankruptcy not long ago but their papers are still circulating.
FSTargetDrone wrote:The paper has no chance of competing with The Chicago Tribune.
As much trouble as the Sun-Times is in, the Tribune Company is pretty much fucked.
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Re: 10 US Newspapers That Will Fold...

Post by Big Phil »

I'm surprised the Seattle Post-Intelligencer isn't on that list; they're currently up for sale and Heart will be laying people off in the next few weeks. I'm assuming they'll go to online only format, but I wouldn't be surprised if they just closed shop altogether.
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Re: 10 US Newspapers That Will Fold...

Post by Brother-Captain Gaius »

It was pretty big news (pardon the pun) when Rocky Mountain News went under and printed their final paper. We've still got the Denver Post though, which I preferred anyway, so it hasn't really affected me too much.
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Re: 10 US Newspapers That Will Fold...

Post by FSTargetDrone »

The only time I regularly buy a newspaper anymore is the Sunday edition of The Philadelphia Inquirer, and that's because I want the grocery coupons.

The Philadelphia Inquirer and Philadelphia Daily News already have an online presence that has content from both papers on a single site. Thing is, it's free to access, though a paid subscription is available. I don't know how many people pay for it and I can't imagine why anyone would because you don't even need to register to get the freely-available material. Even so, I rarely look at the site, other than for Sports information.
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Re: 10 US Newspapers That Will Fold...

Post by Fleet Admiral JD »

The Christian Science Monitor is going to a weekly with a daily online edition. Kind of a shame, really, as it's regularly cited as a truly unbiased source.
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Re: 10 US Newspapers That Will Fold...

Post by Macunaima »

Folha de São Paulo is the largest newspaper in Brazil, and O Estado de São Paulo the sixth. They're feeling the pinch of new medias getting more space in recent years but they still healthy, and Folha has a strong presence online, as they control the largest Internet access and content provider in Latin America.
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Re: 10 US Newspapers That Will Fold...

Post by Glocksman »

Evansville used to have 2 newspapers.
The morning Evansville Courier and the evening Evansville Press.
At the end of 1998, the Press closed its doors and the morning paper because the Evansville Courier & Press.

Wikipedia actually has a decent summary;
Article on the Courier and Press

Back in 1979-1980, I had a Press route when Scripps-Howard owned the evening Press and I remember the motto 'Give light and the people will find their own way' on the masthead of the paper right under the lighthouse logo.
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Re: 10 US Newspapers That Will Fold...

Post by Simplicius »

Local papers in my areas had been shrinking for a while, then VillageSoup began buying them out and consolidating them. The new, consolidated papers are probably going to stick around in print and online form for some time to come thanks to VS' business model, but the trade-off is in reduced content, a decrease in reportage in favor of community and business news (i.e. paid content), a dilution of coverage over a much larger geographic area, and lower standards of writing.

Blethen has been trying, unsuccessfully, to sell the Portland Press Herald/Maine Sunday Telegram for a year now. An in-state investment group has been trying to buy them, but has not yet been able to raise the money to do so. Meanwhile, the paper's market value is dropping and revenues are declining. This hasn't seemed to affect coverage much, though - the print edition remains a full daily, and the online version is still free.
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Re: 10 US Newspapers That Will Fold...

Post by Slacker »

Newsday's doing okay here in New York-they've been bought by Cablevision, which means we've got a healthy, if somewhat gigantic, media conglomerate running most news media here on Long Island. It's primary circulation isn't the city, but Nassau and Suffolk, which with a combined population of something like 4 million probably give it enough of a base to survive on. They did recently raise the price of the weekday editions from .50 to .75, which was a bit of a surprise to everyone.

I primarily read it for the sports and comics, I've been getting my actual news online for something like eight or nine years now. It is a good way to kill time at work, though. *shrug*
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