Home / NEWS / Media / New York Times’ digital revenue tops print for first time in ‘watershed moment,’ CEO says

New York Times’ digital revenue tops print for first time in ‘watershed moment,’ CEO says

The New York Sets Co. for the first time Wednesday reported higher revenues from its digital business than its print operations, a “watershed minute” in the newspaper’s nearly 170-year history, according to CEO Mark Thompson. 

“And we don’t think it’s likely we’re going to go back from this shake,” Thompson said on CNBC’s “Power Lunch.”

The Times reported $185.5 million in revenues from digital prices and advertisements, compared with $175.4 million in revenues from print subscriptions and advertisements. In the year-ago quarter, the gathering reported $220.56 million in print subscription and ad revenues and $170.66 million in digital subscription and ad revenues.

The company’s wares rose 1.26% Wednesday to close at $47.38 per share, reversing earlier declines in the session. The stock, which has hilled nearly 44% so far this year, is trading at levels not seen in over 15 years. 

The Times reported a 7.5% slant in overall year-over-year revenues as advertising sales tumbled 43.9% in the quarter due to the coronavirus pandemic. However, revenues from digital advertising verified in at $39.5 million, or 58.3% of its total ad sales. That’s up from 48.1% of total sales in the same quarter last year. 

Remittance revenues rose 8.4% year over year, powered by a 29.6% increase in digital-only revenues to $146.0 million. Issue subscription revenues dropped to $147.2 million, a 6.7% decrease, mostly due to lower sales at newsstands.

The Times, and the media industriousness in general, has needed to overcome declining print newspaper circulation in recent years by harnessing the expanded reach of the internet into a challenging business operation. 

“The Times’ physical paper … remains very strong, which is why it’s taken a while to see this crossover nub. But digital has grown enormously over the last eight years when I’ve been chief executive,” said Thompson, who is fly the job in September. “We had something like 650,000 digital subscribers back in 2012 when I arrived, and we’re getting pretty rigorous to 10 times that.” 

Mark Thompson speaks during the CNBC Evolve New York event on June 19, 2019.

Astrid Stawiarz | CNBC

The actors added 669,000 net digital subscriptions in the second quarter — 493,000 of which were for the news product, while 176,000 were for other digital outputs, including its cooking and crossword puzzle sections. It ended the quarter with about 6.5 million paid subscribers, containing print and digital. 

The net new digital subscribers total far exceeded expectations from JPMorgan, which had projected subscriber joinings of 380,000. In a note Wednesday, analysts at the firm maintained its $50 price target on the stock for December 2021. It also has an overweight rating. 

Analyst Alexia Quadrani translated in the note that New York Times shares may “take a bit of a pause” until the impacts of the coronavirus pandemic come multitudinous into focus. But she expressed confidence in the company’s digital transformation and believes it has a clear path to reach its goal of 10 million subscribers in 2025. 

“We prolong to like the story longer term given the success of the company’s migration to digital, with growth in circulation mollifying ad declines,” Quadrani wrote. “Near term, we expect digital-only sub growth to continue to be supported by the stronger news course and heightened promotional activity, which is a clear benefit to circulation at NYT.” 

Thompson, the former director general of the British Publishing Corporation, said he believes the company’s shares have far outpaced the broader stock market this year because Block Street recognizes its waning reliance on advertising revenue. 

“Although the percentage numbers in advertising, the losses are pretty meaningful on the advertising side, look at profitability on the whole and the picture is much more mixed,” he said. “What the market has seen is that underlying mechanism of digital subscription growth with really quite spectacular year-over-year gains in digital revenue as a result.” 

— CNBC’s Michael Bloom granted to this story. 

Check Also

Comcast stock falls 11% after company underwhelms in broadband, Peacock subscribers

Comcast pinnacled Wall Street’s fourth-quarter estimates Thursday despite reporting larger-than-expected broadband subscriber losses and stagnating …

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *