Washington Post reports profit drop

  • Associated Press
  • Friday, October 31, 2008 8:15pm
  • Business

NEW YORK — The Washington Post Co. said Friday its third-quarter profit tumbled 86 percent, hurt by reduced revenue at its namesake newspaper and an accounting charge that reflects the declining value of The Herald and its other smaller papers.

The Washington-based company, whose properties also include Newsweek magazine, the Kaplan academic testing service, The Herald and The Gazette weekly papers in Maryland and television stations, said earnings slid to $10.1 million, or $1.08 per share, from $72.2 million, or $7.60 per share, in the year-ago quarter.

The company’s newspapers have suffered — like all other papers across the country — from declining ad revenue because of the migration of readers to the Internet and a weakening economy that has depressed consumer and ad spending.

Because prospects for cash flow have diminished, the company took a goodwill impairment charge of $4.48 per share to adjust for the reduced value of The Herald, The Gazette and some military publications.

Although the ad decline affects all papers, its effect on the goodwill value depends partly on when a company buys an asset and what it paid. The Post company, for instance, bought The Gazette relatively recently, in the early ’90s, giving its accounting books less time to absorb deep swings in revenue. It bought The Herald in the ’70s.

The company also recorded a charge of 84 cents per share related to a plant closing in College Park, Md., and a charge of $1.39 per share for unrealized foreign currency losses.

Revenue for the period grew 10 percent to $1.13 billion from $1.02 billion, largely on improved revenue from its education and cable television segments.

The Post company gets about 53 percent of its revenue from the Kaplan business and another 16 percent from its Cable One unit, which signed up more customers for its high-speed Internet and telephone services and increased many service rates over the past year.

Revenue at the company’s television stations grew slightly because of a boost from the Olympics and political advertising, but ad sales in other categories were generally weak.

Gannett Co. and Media General Inc. earlier reported similar television gains to offset plunging sales among their newspapers.

At the Post newspaper, print advertising revenue fell 14 percent during the quarter. The company did not provide advertising totals for its other papers.

Online revenue companywide grew 13 percent, but that was not enough to offset the declines in print because the Web sites make up a smaller share of overall revenue.

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