Time says it too: Newspapers are far from dead
Not too long ago, I opined that despite (or because of) the Internet, newspapers are far from dead. In fact, I wrote, they’re one of the most profitable industries in the world.
Now Time magazine backs me up, albeit a few months later.
According to Time, only commercial banks (32.4 percent profit margin) and pharmaceutical companies (24.2 percent profit margin) beat out papers, which have an average 19.3 percent margin.
In comparison, ExxonMobil’s 2005 profit margin was 9.7 percent.
Economics 101 (for those of you who don’t know): While you might read that oil companies are making profits of umpteen billions of dollars, those figures don’t take into account how much those companies are spending. Which is why sites bashing them talk about profit dollars, not profit percents.
Public Citizen (a group I usually like a lot) even twisted the numbers this way:
As Americans shell out more dollars at the pump, the profit margin by U.S. oil refiners has shot up 79% from 1999 (the year Exxon and Mobil merged) to 2004.
See, it talks about an increase in profit margin. But when you’re dealing with small numbers (four to five percent), a small numerical increase becomes a large percentage increase.
Grr.











gnomic says:
I’ve been fact-checking you on this one Andrew (Why? Because I need a life.) because those profit numbers don’t seem right to me.
I’m not sure how the profit margin is being calculated (perhaps it is gross, but that isn’t an accurate measure of profit), but smartmoney.com puts the average net margin of the 5 biggest newpaper players at 10.55% (adjusted for revenue weight -see formula below). The highest NRM was Gannett at 14.4 and lowest was New York Times at 5.4%. By comparison, Smartmoney puts Exxon at a NRM of 11.6.
http://www.smartmoney.com/eqsnaps/index.cfm?story=competition&symbol=GCI
Frankly, the numbers aren’t that good. Note the total 12 month ave return and moderate EPS growth.
I looked through the Time reference, but didn’t see the numbers you posted here stated in the article - I don’t know why. Doesn’t seem like a mistake you would make; perhaps the reference is wrong.
Note: The 10.55 weighted average is (sum of (revenue X net margin)) / (sum of revenue) or in real numbers: =(7880*14.4+1577*10.8+3361*5.4+2522*8.8+5495*8.9)/(7880+1577+3361+2522+5495)