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Fairfax slashes value of Stuff as Nine merger looms

Author
NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Wed, 15 Aug 2018, 3:46PM
Fairfax Media Group more than halved the value of its Kiwi assets.
Fairfax Media Group more than halved the value of its Kiwi assets.

Fairfax slashes value of Stuff as Nine merger looms

Author
NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Wed, 15 Aug 2018, 3:46PM

Fairfax Media Group more than halved the value of its Kiwi assets, attaching just A$40 million ($44m) to mastheads that were once the core of a billion dollar investment.

Sydney-based Fairfax is pursuing a A$2.2 billion deal with Nine Entertainment Co where the television company will effectively take over the publisher in Australia's biggest media consolidation since rules were changed allowing the ownership of print, television and radio assets.

That deal didn't place much emphasis on the opportunities provided by the New Zealand division, Stuff, which again had the value of its intangible assets slashed.

Fairfax cut A$60.5m from the value of Stuff's licences, mastheads and trade names - including the Sunday Star-Times, Dominion Post and Press newspapers - to A$39.8m

Those assets were valued at $1.12b in 2003 when the formerly Australian family-owned media group bought the Kiwi business from Rupert Murdoch's Independent Newspapers Ltd.

"The New Zealand media business is facing similar structural print revenue declines as Australia," Fairfax said in its annual report.

"Digital revenue is expected to grow, albeit from a smaller base, which doesn't mitigate or offset print revenue declines."

Stuff's earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation shrank 27 per cent to $40.5m in the year ended June. Revenue fell 7.5 per cent to $301.4m. Earnings were squeezed by a $3.4m provision as the media group reassessed its Holidays Act liabilities and invested $2.6m in the Stuff Fibre telecommunications retail service provider.

The New Zealand unit also bore the brunt of restructuring costs in a year when it sold or closed a third of its unprofitable community and regional publications. It accounted for A$16.2m of the group's A$36m of annual restructuring and redundancy charges.

Stuff's digital revenue climbed 21 per cent to $47.8m, driven largely by Stuff Fibre and Neighbourly. Fairfax attributed the growth to greater use of those services by its existing 2.1 million online audience. Other revenue gained 14 per cent to $17.6m.

"The pain of restructuring efforts will prove to be worth it as the benefits start to flow in future years and bring forward the time when increases in digital revenue will outweigh declines in print," chief executive Greg Hywood said in the annual report.

That will take some time, with Stuff's print advertising revenue sliding 17 per cent to $140.8m. Print subscriptions were also down 5.9 per cent to $95.2m. At the current rate of decline in print advertising and subscriptions - about 13 per cent - it will be five more years before digital and other revenue surpasses that income provided the new income streams can maintain a 19 per cent growth rate.

Other experiments include the 49 per cent stake Stuff has taken in start-up power retailer energyclubnz - which takes long-term contracts with Vector and delivers electricity to its members 'at cost'.

Fairfax hasn't given up hope the New Zealand Court of Appeal will overturn decisions blocking a planned merger of Stuff with Kiwi rival, NZME.

Hywood noted the NZ division's strong digital assets put it in the box seat to participate in any domestic media consolidation. A tie-up with free-to-air TV and radio operator MediaWorks has been mooted as an option if Stuff is carved out in the Nine deal.

The New Zealand division's performance lagged behind a 1.2 per cent increase in group ebitda to A$274.2m, despite a 3.1 per cent revenue decline to A$1.69b. The company reported a net loss of A$53.6m, due to A$175.9m of impairments on the Stuff and Australian community divisions. The board declared a final dividend of 1.8 Australian cents per share, payable on September 6.

The ASX-listed shares fell 3.1 per cent to 86.25 Australian cents, having gained 14 per cent so far this year.

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