Richard Perez-Pena of The New York Times writes that the Wall Street Journal’s slim profits, compared to other papers, is what makes parent company Dow Jones & Co. vulnerable to a takeover offer such as the $5 billion bid from New Corp.
Perez-Pena wrote, “In part, The Journal’s recent struggles can be attributed to its longstanding commitment to high-quality journalism that translates into high costs, and to the particular pressures felt by a business-oriented newspaper.
“But they are also the result of some management decisions to expand during the late 1990s boom, high turnover in the paper’s ad sales department and recent attempts to broaden the paper’s advertising base with the Saturday issue.
“The Journal and its Web site account for most of the consumer media group, which makes up about 55 percent of Dow Jones’s revenues. As a whole, the group posted a slight operating loss in 2005 and a positive margin of 3 percent last year, despite unusually strong ad sales — and analysts say the margins for the Journal were probably worse.
“Yet even in unsettled times, with newspapers unsure of their futures, many still rack up healthy profits.”
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