The New York Times Co on February 03 reported a 26-percent drop in quarterly net profit as an increase in digital advertising revenue failed to make up for what it lost in print ads and circulation.
The Times Co said net profit declined 26.2 percent in the fourth quarter to $67.1 million, or 44 cents per share, compared with $90.9 million, or 61 cents per share, in the same quarter a year ago.
Revenue fell 2.9 percent to $661.7 million as advertising revenue declined 3.1 percent and circulation revenue was down 3.6 percent.
Digital advertising revenue rose 11.1 percent in the quarter to $113.2 million while print advertising revenue decreased 7.2 percent.
For the full year, the Times Co posted a net profit of $107.7 million compared with $19.9 million the previous year. Total revenue slipped 1.9 percent to $2.39 billion.
The company had nearly $600 million in debt at the end of 2010.
"During the fourth quarter we maintained our relentless focus on managing costs to mitigate the effects that the ongoing transformation of our industry and an uneven economic recovery had on our operating performance," Times Co president and chief executive Janet Robinson said in a statement.
"The advertising marketplace was volatile during the quarter," Robinson said. "Although digital advertising remained strong and grew 11 percent, it could not fully offset the seven percent decline in print advertising revenue."
Robinson said digital advertising revenue accounted for 26 percent of the Times Co's total advertising revenue in the fourth quarter.
Besides its flagship newspaper, The New York Times, the Times Co also owns the International Herald Tribune, The Boston Globe and a dozen other dailies.
Like other US newspapers, The New York Times has been struggling with declining print advertising revenue, falling circulation and the migration of readers to free news online. The Times Co has announced plans to begin charging readers for full access to The New York Times website, NYTimes.com, this year.