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NY Times swings to profit on digital gains

Digital advertising revenue rises by 19% to $49.7 million

By AFP - May 03,2017 - Last updated at May 03,2017

This photo taken on April 27, 2016, shows the New York Times building at 620 Eighth Avenue in New York (AFP file photo)

NEW YORK — The New York Times said on Wednesday it added more than 300,000 digital subscribers this year, resulting in a swing to profit for the newspaper branded as “failing” by President Donald Trump. 

The Times has attributed some of its readership gains to renewed interest in its aggressive coverage of the new administration, which has drawn frequent attacks by Trump. 

Net profit for the prestigious US newspaper group was $13.2 million in the first quarter, compared with a loss of $8.3 million in the same period a year ago. 

Total revenues rose 5.1 per cent to $399 million, led by gains in digital subscriptions and online advertising. 

“These results show the current strength and future potential of our digital strategy not just to reach a large audience, but also to deliver substantial revenue,” said Mark Thompson, president and chief executive officer of the New York Times Company. 

“We added an astonishing 308,000 net digital news subscriptions, making the first quarter the single best quarter for subscriber growth in our history.” 

Overall circulation revenue rose 11 per cent  from a year ago to $242 million. Of that $76 million came from digital-only subscriptions, amounting to a 40 per cent jump from a year ago. 

The number of digital-only subscriptions topped 2.2 million at the end of the quarter, a 62 per cent jump from a year ago. 

Digital advertising revenue was $49.7 million, a rise of 19 per cent from a year ago, and accounted for 38.2 per cent of total ad revenues. 

But the gains failed to fully offset declines in print advertising. 

Thompson said the latest revenue figures were “a vindication of our decision to pivot towards mobile, branded content and a broader suite of marketing services, and to focus on innovation”. 

The New York daily has been facing the familiar problems of major newspapers — shifting to the less profitable online format as print readership declines. 

The Times earlier this year unveiled a new strategic plan that will likely reduce its newsroom staff of around 1,300, while making investments in key areas including “visual journalism” and boosting coverage of the Trump administration. 

The newspaper has moved to get more readers globally with a Spanish-language edition and an expanded office in Australia, and has launched a daily edition for the Snapchat Discover platform. 

 

Amid the readership gains, the Times faced a campaign last month for readers to cancel their subscriptions after it added conservative columnist Bret Stephens, who in his first piece raised questions about the evidence of climate change.

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