Shein related a few excerpts to our class this week. A few shocking statistics included: of the publicly traded newspapers and publishers in the room:
- All but one had a return on assets below their cost of capital (e.g., they generate negative returns to investors on a risk adjusted basis)
- All but one had an Altman Z-Score below 1.8. The Altman Z-Score is a metric that takes a few financial return indicators and predicts the likelihood that a company is in risk of declaring bankruptcy. Over two decades, it has proven to have a high level of efficacy. Score above 3 are good, scores between 1.8 and 3 are "troubled" and scores below 1.8 indicates significant distress (e.g., this is when creditors begin tightening their terms).
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Electrons trump ink.
Hypertext is changing the way people read. Attention spans are getting shorter. Publishers who can wrestle their assets into serving online readership will survive. Those that cannot make the change will go the way of the linotype.
Carey Rowland, author of Glass half-Full
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