Monday, July 23, 2007

Scholastic: The Future

As the end of the Harry Potter era dawns - with millions still to be made from product extensions and paperback rights - some are wondering whether the time is ripe for the sale of the company. The most likely buyers would be (no surprise) private equity; however, there remains an obstacle in the form of the owner. Richard Robinson inherited the company from his father and has grown it into a $2.0billion diversified trade publisher and, while the company is public, he controls 4/5's of the board seats. It is unlikely that the company will be sold despite the arguments contained in this article by Bloomberg.com,

shares of Scholastic, the book's U.S. publisher, are trading at 0.66 times annual sales, compared with 1.04 times sales for rival U.S. book publishers. The shares would be worth more than $50 each, or 48 percent above their current price, if the company were to sell itself, Boyar and Stifel Nicolaus & Co. analyst Drew Crum said.

The Bloomberg authors argue that because Scholastic has not adequately reinvested the Potter windfall and found replacement revenue sources, now is the time to generate a high sale price. In reality, there can't be too much motivation to sell from Robinson since the company will continue to make reasonable profits and high cash flows. In addition, the company has had similar transitions before (Goosebumps and Clifford, the big red dog) - although the Potter franchise dwarfs earlier product successes - and at those junctures commentators wondered where the next earnings generator would come from.

The Bloomberg article does discuss continued operational issues most recently in their direct mail business,

Scholastic's latest stumble is in its direct-mail business, where subscriber delinquencies are rising. Yesterday, the company reported fourth-quarter profit of $40.4 million, or 93 cents a share, missing analysts' average estimate.

Nevertheless, the company has a plan to address these issues and shows no sign of preparing itself for an auction. As the largest Childrens' publisher, the company will have its pick of the best new children's products and, as it has in the past, will re-establish a new product franchise. The company may also acquire companies where the product mix could be leveraged to greater extent via Scholastic's distribution and management structure.

As a shareholder, there should be some concern over earnings growth in the next 12-24mths; however, assuming a premium will drive the stock price because of an anticipated acquisition would seem to be ill-advised.

Sunday, July 22, 2007

Weekly Update: July 22

Publishing:
Dow Jones Yes or No? BBC
Dow Jones MySpace Revenge? PRNewswire
Gratuitous Potter Article: CNN
Christian Retail: WaPo

Information:
Thomson Financial using Generate to build Private Company and Executive Profiles: CMP
EBSCO's New Novalist Portal: Library Journal

E-Books
Wilkins in The Age
Japan's Tiny Books: Wired
Standards Program for Downloadable Media: MediaPost

Libraries:
If Libraries Didn't Exist Would they Be Invented Today? Freakononics

M/A
Acquire Media purchases NewsEdge from Thomson: PRNewswire

Online:
Interview with Vivian Schiller, NY Times.com: MediaPost

Saturday, July 21, 2007

Derbyshire Bed & Breakfast

Well if the floods in Oxfordshire and Gloucester might have you rethinking the camping trip to the UK this summer how about a visit to a lovely b&b in the Derby hills. Here they treat you like family and indeed in my case they are. Hodgkinson's is run by my cousin (with some help from Gemma age 7) who was written up in the Guardian this weekend. This is somewhat of a double edged sword as will go unexplained.

Friday, July 20, 2007

Bureau Van Dijk: Sale Imminent - Update: SOLD

Reuters is reporting that Candover, the principle owner of BVD is likely to agree a sale with one of the two equity groups vying for purchase of the company. Sources tell Reuters that BC Partners and Cinven are the two remaining parties and they estimate that the purchase price will be under 700mm Euros. BVD has a strong market position where it competes but some companies that were initially interested expressed some concern that the data the company distributes isn't owned by BVD. It is hard to know how accurate or relevant this issue was in the sale process but it would seem that unless we see a last minute surprise on purchase price that there will not be a significant premium paid over the initial estimate which we have seen with some other recent media company sales.

Having said that Candover invested 300mm Euros in 2004 - not such a bad return. Management are going to do well also. Good on them.

UPDATE: Reuters is reporting BVD has been sold to BC Partners for a little less that $1.obill. The deal is expected to close in October pending regulatory approval. Reuters

Von Holtzbrinck Resigns from Dow Jones Board

Dieter von Holtzbrinck, the heir to German media conglomerate von Holtzbrinck has resigned in protest over the decision by the DJ board to recommend acceptance of the NewCorp bid for the company. von Holtzbrinck apparently abstained from the vote last week (Post) but had been vocal in recommending the company remain independent. Apparently, the Bancroft family (there are dozens of shareholders) will decide over the next few days/week whether to accept or not, the NewsCorp bid.

(For those unfamiliar with von Holtzbrinck, they are a family owned business operating newspapers, trade publishing, education and digital media businesses in over 80 countries. In the US they own FSG, St Martins, Henry Holt and in the UK they own Macmillan).

In related news, the company posted mixed results (Money) this week with traditional media showing decreases but with international, Barrons and some digital revenues up. Some analysts speculated that the continued softness in DJ's traditional sources of revenue may cause some Bancroft shareholders to take the money and run. In trading, the share price was down slightly based on doubts about whether the deal with NewsCorp would be completed.

Thursday, July 19, 2007

Pearson Speculation (Again)

Yet again, an analyst has suggested that pressure on Pearson will grow given the sales of Harcourt and Thomson Learning at such high multiples. As reported in This is Money (Daily Mail), Deutsche Bank has raised Pearson to 'buy' based and,
demonstrated why, with a bullish 'sum of the parts' valuation on the stock of up to £10.2bn, or 1100p a share.
Currently, Pearson stock is at 823p. Furthermore (talking up the stock),
Mark Braley at Deutsche reckons Pearson's current share price, down 7½p at 823p, ' materially undervalues' the group. He added: 'There is a strong case for management to consider an aggressive restructuring of the portfolio.'
There is nothing to suggest that anything is imminent and Pearson has consistently said that they will resist a P/E advance.

Have Press Release Will Travel

Before you leave on your next vacation consider dropping a press release to let friends and family know about where you are off to. PRNewswire