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Australia's Fairfax in Internet push
5 Apr 2005 -
SYDNEY, April 5 (Reuters) - David Kirk, the new chief executive of
John Fairfax Holdings Ltd. (FXJ.AX: Quote, Profile, Research), makes
clear the Internet, not newspapers, will drive future growth at
Australia's second-biggest newspaper publisher.
Kirk,
a former captain of New Zealand's All Blacks rugby team, has purchased
three online businesses since he was appointed head of Sydney-based
Fairfax in August last year.
He is
confident they will help drive the Internet's contribution to group
earnings from around 4 percent at present to 20 percent over the next
18 months to two years.
"This is what
analysts have calculated. It's a number that's out there and we're not
arguing with it," Kirk told Reuters in an interview on Wednesday.
Kirk
said about 50 percent of that projected growth would come from Trade
Me, New Zealand's largest auction Web site which the publisher
purchased for $467 million last month.
"If we could find another business of that scale and quality I would only be too happy to make the acquisition," he said.
Revenues
at Fairfax Digital, the publisher's online arm, jumped 66.6 percent to
A$42.6 million in the first-half ended Dec. 31, 2005.
Advertising
revenue at its cornerstone Australian publishing business -- which
comprised 82 percent of the business' total revenue for the half --
rose only 1 percent to A$541.7 million. The remainder of group revenues
came from its New Zealand publishing unit.
QUANTUM LEAP
Kirk's
appointment ended a 15-month search for a new chief executive at
Fairfax and was a quantum leap for the 45-year-old, father of three.
He
most recently headed PMP Ltd. (PMP.AX: Quote, Profile, Research),
Australia's biggest commercial printing company but only about an
eighth of the size of Fairfax.
While
his credentials are impressive -- regional president, Australasia, for
Norwegian papermaker Norske Skog (NSG.OL: Quote, Profile, Research),
chief policy adviser to former New Zealand Prime Minister Jim Bolger, a
degree in medicine and a Rhodes scholar -- he came to the role with no
newspaper experience.
He also arrived during a time when advertising revenue growth for the industry slowed to single from double digits.
Fairfax
said last month that trading conditions in Australia for January and
February were mixed. Looking ahead, Kirk said: "There is no obvious
deterioration from February/March conditions, but no clear trend of
improvement."
The group would aim to
keep underlying cost growth at its Australian publishing division at
around 2 percent but that would be more difficult after July when
newsprint prices are scheduled to rise around 7 percent, he said.
Fairfax,
whose main rival is the local arm of Rupert Murdoch's New Corp. Ltd.
(NWS.N: Quote, Profile, Research) (NWS.AX: Quote, Profile, Research),
has ruled out buying a free-to-air television network in the event of
any changes to media ownership laws which may be introduced as early as
next year.
Kirk also said there were
few opportunities in radio that interested the publisher, but it would
be "very interested" in buying a smaller, regional newspaper.
Analysts,
however, expect Fairfax, because of its open share register, to be a
takeover target once proposed changes take affect.
"It doesn't occupy one minute of my day thinking about that sort of activity. It's completely out of my control," he said.
"What
is within my control is the financial performance of the business and
if we deliver strong financial results then our share price will be
fairly valued and anyone who would then want to buy the company would
have to pay a premium."
Fairfax shares
closed 0.76 percent lower on Wednesday at A$3.92 in a firmer overall
market. The stock has risen 2.24 percent so far this year,
underperforming the benchmark index's <.AXJO> 9.3 percent rise.
($1=A$1.40)
By Joanne Collins
- Source: Reuters
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