CEO buys ailing New Zealand media giant for NZ$1 - GulfToday

CEO buys ailing New Zealand media giant for NZ$1

STUFF-750x450

An outside view of the one of New Zealand's largest media organisations Stuff. File / AP

Struggling New Zealand media giant Stuff Limited was sold in a management buy-out deal for the symbolic fee of NZ$1.00 (US$0.61), the group's Australian owners Nine Entertainment announced on Monday.

Nine said that Stuff chief executive officer (CEO) Sinead Boucher would take over the company, which operates New Zealand's most popular news website, stuff.co.nz, and titles such as Wellington's Dominion Post and the Christchurch Press.

"The sale of Stuff is expected to (be) complete by May 31," Nine said in a statement to the Australian stock exchange.

Boucher, who joined the Press as a reporter in 1993 and has spent most of her career at the company, said it was "a new era" for Stuff.

"It is great to take control of our own future with the move to local ownership and the opportunity to build further on the trust of New Zealanders, who turn to us for local and national news and entertainment every day," she told stuff.co.nz.

STUFF-CEO-750x450 Sinead Boucher

The one-dollar price reflects the difficulties in New Zealand's media sector, where COVID-19's impact has slashed revenues already eroded by global internet giants such as Facebook and Google.

Stuff's main domestic rival, NZME, had its own one-dollar bid for the company rejected earlier this month.

Stuff and NZME have both asked staff to take pay cuts due to the virus-induced downturn, with NZME cutting 200 jobs.

German magazine giant Bauer Media Group closed its New Zealand titles with the loss of 237 jobs last month, citing the "severe economic impact" of the pandemic.

Shares in Nine, which had been rumoured to be keen on offloading its New Zealand assets for more than a year, were up 2.9 per cent at Aus$1.41 in early trading on the ASX.

Nine obtained Stuff when it acquired the company's Australian owner, newspaper group Fairfax Media in late 2018.

Agence France-Presse

 

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