lono
Active Member
- Joined
- Nov 6, 2005
- Messages
- 4,585
Couldn't happen to a bunch of nicer guys. Love the part about the debt in the next-to-last graf.
NEW YORK, Oct 10 (Reuters) - Journal Register Co. <JRC.N> on Tuesday said that its former second-largest shareholder has sold nearly all of its shares in the newspaper publisher.
Private Capital Management owns 74,600 shares in the Yardley, Pennsylvania-based publisher, it said in a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. That compares with a filing on June 30 when Private Capital Management owned nearly 3 million shares.
A spokesman for Private Capital Management confirmed the change, but declined to say why it decreased its stake. A Journal Register official was not immediately available for comment.
Journal Register had 39,530,000 shares outstanding as of their last quarterly report in July.
Private Capital Management and chief investment officer Bruce Sherman spearheaded the effort to get the former second-largest U.S. newspaper publisher, Knight Ridder Inc., to sell itself after failing to boost its lagging stock price.
Knight Ridder sold itself to publisher McClatchy Co. <MNI.N> earlier this year for $4.5 billion.
Journal Register, like other newspaper publishers, has been hard hit by a downturn in advertising and circulation. The company's stock has fallen about 60 percent since the beginning of the year and closed on Tuesday at $5.98 per share on the New York Stock Exchange.
"This really strikes me as a culmination of several bad things happening at Journal Register," said Murray Schwartz, a former senior executive at the company that became Journal Register, and currently a mergers and acquisitions attorney at law firm Katten Muchin Rosenman LLP.
Lower circulation has resulted in lower market reach, Schwartz said, giving advertisers reason to look elsewhere to reach their audiences. He also cited the company's debt, which at the end of 2005 was about 77 percent of its total market capitalization.
Journal Register in September said it would cut 82 jobs in its Michigan cluster of newspapers and in August put its daily and weekly newspapers in Massachusetts and Rhode Island up for sale.
NEW YORK, Oct 10 (Reuters) - Journal Register Co. <JRC.N> on Tuesday said that its former second-largest shareholder has sold nearly all of its shares in the newspaper publisher.
Private Capital Management owns 74,600 shares in the Yardley, Pennsylvania-based publisher, it said in a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. That compares with a filing on June 30 when Private Capital Management owned nearly 3 million shares.
A spokesman for Private Capital Management confirmed the change, but declined to say why it decreased its stake. A Journal Register official was not immediately available for comment.
Journal Register had 39,530,000 shares outstanding as of their last quarterly report in July.
Private Capital Management and chief investment officer Bruce Sherman spearheaded the effort to get the former second-largest U.S. newspaper publisher, Knight Ridder Inc., to sell itself after failing to boost its lagging stock price.
Knight Ridder sold itself to publisher McClatchy Co. <MNI.N> earlier this year for $4.5 billion.
Journal Register, like other newspaper publishers, has been hard hit by a downturn in advertising and circulation. The company's stock has fallen about 60 percent since the beginning of the year and closed on Tuesday at $5.98 per share on the New York Stock Exchange.
"This really strikes me as a culmination of several bad things happening at Journal Register," said Murray Schwartz, a former senior executive at the company that became Journal Register, and currently a mergers and acquisitions attorney at law firm Katten Muchin Rosenman LLP.
Lower circulation has resulted in lower market reach, Schwartz said, giving advertisers reason to look elsewhere to reach their audiences. He also cited the company's debt, which at the end of 2005 was about 77 percent of its total market capitalization.
Journal Register in September said it would cut 82 jobs in its Michigan cluster of newspapers and in August put its daily and weekly newspapers in Massachusetts and Rhode Island up for sale.