Friday, July 12, 2013

Domtar's CEO Expects Q2 Earnings to Dip

Domtar Corp. today provided an update on its financial performance for the second quarter of 2013. Domtar's management expects sales to be $1,312 million and estimates the operating loss to be between $30 and $35 million.
EBITDA before items1 will be between $130 and $135 million primarily due to a combination of costs related to maintenance shutdowns, lower pulp productivity, lower paper and pulp shipments and higher costs for freight. During the second quarter of 2013, paper and pulp shipments stood at 801,000 tons and 344,000 metric tons, respectively.
Estimated operating loss in the second quarter of 2013 includes a litigation settlement charge of $49 million, closure and restructuring costs of $18 million, a charge of $5 million related to the impairment and write-down of property, plant and equipment, and depreciation and amortization of $93 million.

RISI Names VP, Mill Intelligence

RISI, the leading information provider for the global forest products industry, today announced the hiring of Jonathan Rager as Vice President of its Mill Intelligence business.
A 20+ year veteran of the forest products industry, Jon comes to RISI from Pöyry Management Consulting where he managed a technical strategy practice area. He has also worked in the corporate lending sector at GE Capital to provide financing to companies in this industry. Earlier in his career Jon held various process engineering and operations roles with several pulp and paper producers. He has a bachelor's degree in Chemical Engineering with honors from The Pennsylvania State University.

GAO: No to Eliminating Paper Drug Labeling

Eliminating paper drug labeling such as package inserts in favor of e-labels could compromise the availability of information for some patients, physicians, and pharmacists, a government study found.
Stakeholders provided no consensus on the advantages or disadvantages of relying on drug labeling available only electronically, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) said in a report Monday.
Drug manufacturers have supported eliminating paper labels, whereas patient advocates suggest it could adversely affect public health.

Catalyst Pays Municipal Tax

http://www.avtimes.net/catalyst-pays-4-190-777-2013-municipal-tax-bill-1.505876
Catalyst Paper paid its 2013 municipal tax bill of $4,190,777, out of which $3,801,120 is the municipal portion for the Port Alberni paper mill. 
As per the 2012 wastewater treatment facility and Redford street property sale agreement with the city, Catalyst Paper's property taxes will be frozen for the next four years at the 2012 rate.

Publishers Try a Different Kind of Pay Wall

http://adage.com/article/media/publishers-pay-walls-watching-video-key/243069/
Publishers including Maxim, Radar Online, Guitar World and USA Today Sports Media are experimenting with a pay wall that instead of charging readers requires them to watch an advertiser's video.The tactic, which uses a system called Content Unlock from Genesis Media, is meant to help address the disconnect between advertisers' interest in buying web video and consumers' desire to watch enough of it. Most Americans will devote 15 seconds to a given web video before skipping off elsewhere, according to a 2012 Poll Position study. Just 12% will give a video ad 30 seconds. And trying to force consumers to watch ads before a single, brief video can be problematic.

MediaPost Mag Bag

Fitness, Men's Journal Team For Ad Sales Magazine publishers package their own titles together for ad sales all the time, but it’s much less common to see titles owned by two different publishers collaborating.
That's what's happening with a new ad sales partnership between Fitness, owned by Meredith Corp., and Men's Journal, owned by Wenner Media. The partnership covers the titles’ print and digital assets.
  The ad sales alliance, announced earlier this week, will allow Fitness and Men's Journal to offer a bigger circulation footprint to advertisers that cuts across gender lines, making them more competitive with big health and fitness publishers like Rodale. The two magazines together have an average circulation of 2.24 million, according to the Alliance for Audited Media (Fitness, 1.53 million, Men's Journal, 714,000), putting them in the same league as titles like Men's Health, with 1.9 million; Women’s Health, with 1.58 million; and Shape, with 1.63 million.

The first advertisers to tap the Fitness-Men's Journal tie-up include outdoor recreational apparel and equipment brand Marmot, which is placing ads in both titles for its “Lead Now” initiative, promoting a one-year global climbing expedition by Paige Claassen. The program, which will run through June 30, 2014, includes a series of Webisodes, editorial coverage of Paige's journey, and online and social media promotion.Another advertiser, The Beef Checkoff, is running a four-page ad unit focused on summer grilling in both magazines, along with two other Meredith titles.
Reader’s Digest Cuts Rate Base
 Reader’s Digest Association is cutting the guaranteed circulation of its flagship magazine from 5.5 million to three million. The move comes as RDA undergoes its second bankruptcy reorganization with the approval of various creditors, including the sale of various properties, such as Everyday With Rachael Ray and Allrecipes.com, to focus on the core Reader’s Digest brand. The company expects to exit Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection by the end of the month.

And more...

How Investing in Print Could Pay Off

http://www.businessweek.com/articles/2013-07-11/how-investing-in-print-could-pay-off#r=nav-r-story
News Corp. Time Warner. Now, Tribune. They’re all spinning off their declining print businesses. 
Why would anyone buy these orphans? Because they will offer pure plays on what promises to be more mergers and acquisitions in the industry. It might even get exciting.
“The spun-off publishing companies may be better positioned to consolidate the shrinking newspaper and magazine industries,” says Paul Sweeney of Bloomberg Industries.
Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp. Publishing, he notes, will be the biggest U.S. publisher, with $8.2 billion in revenue and $1.3 billion in earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization. Its $2.6 billion in cash and no debt leave it primed to acquire titles. Murdoch has been seeking ways to take out Tribune’s (TRBAA)Los Angeles Times, people familiar with the matter told Bloomberg News in March. Last year, News Corp. (NWS) management looked into acquiring about a fifth of Time Inc.’s (TWX) magazine titles, according to two people with knowledge of the matter who asked
not to be named because they weren’t authorized to speak publicly.
According to Bloomberg, News Corp. Publishing has more cash at its disposal than any print competitor. “They will be acquisitive—that’s the way they operate,” Karen Klapper, a debt analyst at CreditSights, told Bloomberg’s Edmund Lee on July 1. “That’s the only way it grows. Publishing is only going one way these days, and it’s not up.”

Folio: People on the Move

Mike Smith has been named vice president, revenue platforms and operations, at Hearst Magazines Digital Media. He was formerly president of Forbes.com and chief digital officer at Forbes Media.
Hearst Men’s Group has named Lisa Boyars to the position of executive director, group marketing. Boyars had been working for Condé Nast Media Group since 2007.  
Stacy Nathan has been named advertising director at Allure. Nathan had previously been advertising director at Marie Claire. Stacy Bettman has been promoted to associate publisher at Allure where she had been advertising director.
Glam Media, Inc. has made several additions to its sales team throughout the country:
Leah Corselli has been hired as vice president, sales for the West Coast.
Theresa Boras has been named director of East Coast sales. She brings experience from her positions at AOL, CBS Interactive and Fairfax Media.
Christine Clark has been promoted to senior vice president of U.S. sales.
Kari King has been promoted to vice president, U.S. sales-Central & West.
UBM Tech’s Information Week announced the hiring of four new editors and one promotion:
Wyatt Kash joins as editor of InformationWeek Government.
Shane O’Neill joins as managing editor. He had been assistant managing editor at CIO.com.
Alexandra Rudansky joins as associate editor of InformationWeek Healthcare.
Kristin Burnham joins as senior editor. Burnham had most recently served as senior writer at CIO.com.
James Donahue has been promoted to managing editor. He was previously copy chief at InformationWeek.  
And more...

Digital's Share of Print Market, 20.6% By 2018

By 2018, digital printing will equal 50% of the global offset sector, and be higher in the more mature print regions, according to a new study from Smithers Pira titled, The Future of Offset vs Digital Printing to 2018. In 2008, digital accounted for a little under 18.5% of the offset market in value terms. Continuing falls in run length is the key reason for the adoption of digital technology by many offset companies, together with the recent improvements in digital print technology. Key findings:
Digital's share of the total print market will grow from 9.8% in 2008 to 20.6% in 2018, led by inkjet technology where improvements in productivity and reliability are making digital printing more cost effective over higher runs.
By 2018, the digital printing market will grow from $131.5 billion in 2013 to $187.7 billion -- a compound annual growth rate of 7.4%.

The global volume of all offset prints will fall by 10.2% between 2008 and 2018, while digital print volume is forecast to grow by 68.1%.

North America Ranked as Top Market for M&A

Forty percent of business executives, whose organizations are contemplating merger and acquisition (M&A) transactions in 2013, expect the deals will occur in North America. According to a recent Deloitte online poll, more than one quarter of these deals (28 percent) will be under $1 billion.
Additionally, more than two-thirds of executives (67.1 percent) expect the U.S. economy to continue improving throughout the year, with 76 percent of respondents significantly optimistic, more optimistic or maintaining their existing level of optimism about the M&A market for the remainder of the year.

Judge: Apple Conspired to Raise E-book Prices

Apple Inc. broke antitrust laws and conspired with publishers to raise electronic book prices significantly in spring 2010, a federal judge ruled Wednesday, citing “compelling evidence” from the words of the late Steve Jobs.
U.S. District Judge Denise Cote said Apple knew that no publisher could risk acting alone to try to eliminate Amazon.com’s $9.99 price for the most popular e-books so it “created a mechanism and environment that enabled them to act together in a matter of weeks to eliminate all retail price competition for their e-books.”