The company's success ie explored in an article posted this week on the Editor & Publisher website:
GateHouse had a simple message during its "road shows" leading to the public offering: Community papers don't face the secular pressures pounding at metro newspapers; revenues will grow with aggressive acquisitions and by pumping up its previously modest Web operations -- and huge proportions of that free cash flow will be returned to stockholders in dividends with yields that are triple the average for publicly held newspaper companies.
"Investors were supportive of the business model, and what we see for the future -- and, of course, the dividend play," Reed says.
As it turned out, investors who were first skeptical, even bewildered, by the GateHouse IPO proposal came to embrace it. On its first day of trading, shares opened on the top of its forecast $16 to $18 per-share range, and jumped 17.5% to $21.16. (By early January, the share price had settled into an $18- to-$19 range.)
In this area, of course, GateHouse owns The Carthage Press, The Neosho Daily News, the Neosho Post, and the Big Nickel.
Their web operations will remain modest as long as they keep using that crappy townnews template.
ReplyDeleteWas there any mention of Hacker's employment status in the article since he's apparently the parent company's bread and butter.
ReplyDeleteI thought Hacker was with the Carthage Press now... ?
ReplyDelete"establishing themselves as a forces"
ReplyDeleteFYI: You need an edit there...