Categories: OLD Media Moves

Providence Journal cutting stock listings

John Kostrzewa, the business editor of the Providence Journal, announced in his Sunday column that the paper would be cutting stock and mutual fund listings during the week and the weekend to open up more space for local and national business news.

The column is available here, but the ProJo website can only be read by registering first, so here are the highlights:

1. “We also plan to use more local stories from our suburban staff that have statewide business interest. And we will have more listings, such as the new business incorporations.”

2. “Starting today, the stock and mutual fund tables in the Sunday Money & Business section will be condensed to four pages.”

3. “Daily, the stock listings will be cut back to 900 of the most heavily traded stocks from the previous day and the 1,200 mutual funds with the biggest net asset value.”

4. “We are not immune to changing economies and readership trends that require us to make business decisions in order to run our company while providing the best Business section we can. We’ve tried to do that.”

In the Jan. 4 newspaper, Kostrzewa announced other changes to the section, which can be read here. They included:

“We’re making changes to the Business section. Starting today, the stock and mutual fund tables on Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday will be reduced to one page.” Otherwise, the Wednesday column reads verbatim to what was in today’s paper.

I don’t look at the Providence Journal often enough to make a determination about whether these changes are positive or negative for the paper. But the last comment is telling, I thought. It implies that the business section is being forced to cut the amount of newsprint it uses, which means less space — whether it’s for stock and mutual fund listings or for stories.

View Comments

    Recent Posts

    Marfil among the WSJ layoffs in DC

    Jude Marfil, newsroom operations manager for The Wall Street Journal in its Washington office, was…

    5 mins ago

    Greene departing Cointelegraph

    Tristan Greene, deputy U.S. news editor at cryptocurrency news site CoinTelegraph, is leaving next month…

    12 mins ago

    Dynamo hires former Business Insider executive editor Harrington

    Former Business Insider executive editor Rebecca Harrington has been hired by Dynamo to be its…

    2 days ago

    Bloomberg TV hires Kerubo as desk producer

    Bloomberg Television has hired Brenda Kerubo as a desk producer in London. She will be covering Europe's…

    2 days ago

    Jittery CNBC staff reassured by new boss

    In a meeting at CNBC headquarters Thursday afternoon, incoming boss Mark Lazarus presented a bullish…

    2 days ago

    Making business news accessible to a wider audience

    Ritika Gupta, the BBC's North American business correspondent, was interviewed by Global Woman magazine about…

    2 days ago