By NZPA
Thursday 15th August 2002 |
Text too small? |
INL, 44 percent owned by Rupert Murdoch's Newscorp, posted a June year net profit of $37.8 million compared with $26.1 million a year ago. Analysts had picked a profit of $46 million.
Sky TV reported a loss of $30.17 million compared with $42.3 million the year before, higher than the predicted loss of $27 million.
Chairman Ken Cowley said INL would concentrate in the current year in improving margins which dropped during the year just completed from 23.2 percent to 22.6 percent.
However, he said the margins on ebitda (earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation) had risen 0.9 percent if Wellington was excluded.
"We have addressed this underperformance in Wellington with our decision to merge the two Wellington daily newspapers into the Dominion Post," he said.
Since the merger, the new paper had seen daily sales of more than 100,000.
Total costs had increased by 1.8 percent ($7.8 million), largely due to an increase in newsprint costs and circulation (2.3 percent).
Advertising revenue across the group was up by 2.3 percent ($7.7 million).
Despite funding a $36 million share buyback, INL's debt from the publishing division fell $10 million to $452 million due to strong operating publishing cashflows (up $5 million), reduced capital expenditure (down $5 million) and sharply lower income tax expense because of the transfer of Sky TV's tax losses on consolidation.
INL's outgoing chief executive Tom Mockridge said the overall result was that INL had funded an increase in its investment in Sky TV while increasing net profit by 45 percent.
Chairman Ken Cowley said INL would concentrate in the current year in improving margins which dropped during the year just completed from 23.2 percent to 22.6 percent.
However, he said the margins on ebitda (earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation) had risen 0.9 percent if Wellington was excluded.
"We have addressed this underperformance in Wellington with our decision to merge the two Wellington daily newspapers into the Dominion Post," he said.
Since the merger, the new paper had seen daily sales of more than 100,000.
Total costs had increased by 1.8 percent ($7.8 million), largely due to an increase in newsprint costs and circulation (2.3 percent).
Advertising revenue across the group was up by 2.3 percent ($7.7 million).
Despite funding a $36 million share buyback, INL's debt from the publishing division fell $10 million to $452 million due to strong operating publishing cashflows (up $5 million), reduced capital expenditure (down $5 million) and sharply lower income tax expense because of the transfer of Sky TV's tax losses on consolidation.
INL's outgoing chief executive Tom Mockridge said the overall result was that INL had funded an increase in its investment in Sky TV while increasing net profit by 45 percent.
No comments yet
Sky profit rises 16%
Daily ShareChat: Sky TV
Sky Network 1H profit climbs 19% as MYSKY start-up costs abate, sales grow
SkyCity profit surges 30% as debt buyback slashes interest costs; stocks gains
Sky City expects to make $70 million from sale of cinema businesses
Sky earnings forecast cut by AspectHuntley
Magazines boast readership strength
Sky consolidation boosts INL
Sky cuts losses, lifts sales
Sky goes from strength to strength