New York Times in talks to buy The Athletic

BleedGopher

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per Axios:

The New York Times is looking into a potential acquisition of The Athletic, three sources familiar with the matter tell Axios.

Driving the news: Sources say the Times approached The Athletic following a report about a potential deal between The Athletic and Axios in March.

  • The Wall Street Journal reported in May that The Athletic and Axios are no longer in talks for a potential merger via SPAC, and that The Athletic viewed The Times as a better contender for a merger.
The Times has been reaching out to former employees to vet The Athletic's business and culture, sources say.

  • The Times is eyeing a full acquisition, not a joint venture or strategic partnership.
  • The Athletic raised $50 million last year in a Series D funding round, just before the pandemic, putting its latest valuation at around $500 million.
By the numbers: Sources say The Athletic has about 1.2 million subscribers, some on discounted rate plans.

  • The company did around $80 million in revenue last year, sources say, confirming a report from the Wall Street Journal. It isn't profitable.
  • The Athletic employs about 600 people full-time, including around 400 editorial staffers.
  • Both The Athletic and the Times suffered from the pandemic early on. The Times laid off 68 people, mostly in advertising, last June. But its business still saw explosive growth, thanks in large part to a newsy election year.
  • The Athletic laid off 46 people last June, but ended up hiring about double that number back last year, according to one source. Most of the hires were across business operations and marketing, as live sports began to reemerge.
The big picture: The deal would help bolster the Times' subscription strategy, especially if it were to one day bundle its existing subscription offerings.

  • The Times has nearly 8 million total paid subscribers, with nearly 7 million paying for just digital products. It's on pace to meet its goal of 10 million digital subscribers by 2025.
  • The Times could possibly include The Athletic's sports subscription business as part of a larger subscription bundle.
  • The Times sells subscriptions around its core news product, games, cooking and audio. It's currently testing subscription offerings for its consumer reviews site, Wirecutter, as well as NYT Kids.
On an earnings call earlier this month, Times CEO Meredith Kopit Levien noted that these types of ancillary subscription products, "combined with the differential value and demand advantages of our core news product ... should enable The Times to become a larger and more profitable business as we scale."

  • Amid the Biden era, more of the Times' new subscriber growth has been weighted towards non-news products than ever before.


Go Gophers!!
 

Uggghhhh... that would probably push me off the subscription to The Athletic. Yuck. I can't say I'm surprised though, the way The Athletic has shifted in the last year or two.
 

per Axios:

The New York Times is looking into a potential acquisition of The Athletic, three sources familiar with the matter tell Axios.

Driving the news: Sources say the Times approached The Athletic following a report about a potential deal between The Athletic and Axios in March.

  • The Wall Street Journal reported in May that The Athletic and Axios are no longer in talks for a potential merger via SPAC, and that The Athletic viewed The Times as a better contender for a merger.
The Times has been reaching out to former employees to vet The Athletic's business and culture, sources say.

  • The Times is eyeing a full acquisition, not a joint venture or strategic partnership.
  • The Athletic raised $50 million last year in a Series D funding round, just before the pandemic, putting its latest valuation at around $500 million.
By the numbers: Sources say The Athletic has about 1.2 million subscribers, some on discounted rate plans.

  • The company did around $80 million in revenue last year, sources say, confirming a report from the Wall Street Journal. It isn't profitable.
  • The Athletic employs about 600 people full-time, including around 400 editorial staffers.
  • Both The Athletic and the Times suffered from the pandemic early on. The Times laid off 68 people, mostly in advertising, last June. But its business still saw explosive growth, thanks in large part to a newsy election year.
  • The Athletic laid off 46 people last June, but ended up hiring about double that number back last year, according to one source. Most of the hires were across business operations and marketing, as live sports began to reemerge.
The big picture: The deal would help bolster the Times' subscription strategy, especially if it were to one day bundle its existing subscription offerings.

  • The Times has nearly 8 million total paid subscribers, with nearly 7 million paying for just digital products. It's on pace to meet its goal of 10 million digital subscribers by 2025.
  • The Times could possibly include The Athletic's sports subscription business as part of a larger subscription bundle.
  • The Times sells subscriptions around its core news product, games, cooking and audio. It's currently testing subscription offerings for its consumer reviews site, Wirecutter, as well as NYT Kids.
On an earnings call earlier this month, Times CEO Meredith Kopit Levien noted that these types of ancillary subscription products, "combined with the differential value and demand advantages of our core news product ... should enable The Times to become a larger and more profitable business as we scale."

  • Amid the Biden era, more of the Times' new subscriber growth has been weighted towards non-news products than ever before.


Go Gophers!!
Interesting fit IMO. I subscribe to and love both; I got The Athletic for $1 a month on a pandemic special and man is that good writing and reporting; their Twins writers are stellar and understand the nuances of the data and sabermetrics.
 

Not surprising. NY Times stock plummets after purchase of The Athletic

NYT Stock Plummets

NYT Shares Slump Over Athletic Deal's Expected Hit To Profit

The Athletic was a great model in the market several years ago, a great source of paid content. It's fallen off in the last year or so, although there is still quality content in there if you look. Not sure if it will continue to be worth the subscription before too long though...
 

Not surprising. NY Times stock plummets after purchase of The Athletic

NYT Stock Plummets

NYT Shares Slump Over Athletic Deal's Expected Hit To Profit

The Athletic was a great model in the market several years ago, a great source of paid content. It's fallen off in the last year or so, although there is still quality content in there if you look. Not sure if it will continue to be worth the subscription before too long though...
Buy the rumor. Sell the news.
 


The Athletic continues its slide after being purchased by the NY Times...

The Athletic, as we know it, appears to be "dying a slow death" after NY Times purchase

>>The Athletic has lost more than 1,100 subscribers since the sports site was purchased by the New York Times last month, with many more readers opting not to renew, a source directly involved with the Times takeover told OutKick.

The Times purchased The Athletic on Jan. 6, rescuing the fledgling subscription-only site with $550 million in cash, the primary purpose being to build its own subscription database.

Eventually, those subscribers will be delivered more than content from The Athletic, and very likely eventually steered away from content on The Athletic and toward the Times’ content, the source said.<<

Sad to see, but the site has been in decline for a year or two already.
 




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