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Earnings: Tribune Loses $124 Million In Q3; Severance, Writedowns Take Heavy Toll

imageTribune CEO Sam Zell’s entry in the understatement of the week contest: “We are operating in an exceptionally difficult financial and economic environment.” True, but Tribune’s problems stretch back further and go deeper than backlash from the current economy. The company reported a Q3 loss of $124 million Monday, compared with earnings of $84 million for the same period last year. Compared with Q307, revenues declined 10 percent, to $1 billion, while operating cash flow dropped 67 percent year over year.  But Zell isn’t understating anything when he talks of how aggressively Tribune is moving, as evidenced by the $45 million charge for severance and termination benefits. Nearly all of that went to reducing publishing headcount; overall, the company cut the equivalent of 1,300 full-time positions. 

Advertising:  Publishing advertising revenues slid 19 percent ($111 million). As part of that, interactive revenues dropped 7 percent ($4 million) “due to a decline in classified advertising, partially offset by increases in retail and national advertising.”

CareerBuilder: Tribune reported a non-operating pre-tax $79 million gain on the Q3 sale of its 10 percent interest in CareerBuilder to Gannett (NYSE: GCI) for $135 million.

More details in the earnings release. The privately held company promises a conference call before the end of the year. The company also filed its 10-Q Monday and if I ever pay someone to read SEC filings for me, I’d start with this one.

Photo Credit: wallyg

Nov 10, 2008 5:12 PM ET

Posted In: Money, Earnings, Companies, Tribune

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Comments (1)

Nov 12, 2008 10:47 PM

Wow.
> The company reported a Q3 loss of $124 million Monday, compared with earnings of $84 million for the same period last year.
We all knew the end of the dead tree business model was coming, but that’s stunning by any standard. On my street, when I first moved in 8 years ago, every driveway had a morning paper.  Coffee in hand, when I look down the street each morning, I see that I am the last one.  I feel like I should cancel just to stop bleeding my local Tribune paper for the delivery costs.

Mark Metz

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