Fairfax New Zealand posted its first annual loss in four years as it wrote off than $100 million from the value of its mastheads and buildings and more than doubled its bill to pay out redundancies in 2016, all while resuming dividends to its Australian parent and lifting executive pay.
The Wellington-based unit of ASX-listed Fairfax Media Group reported a loss of $75.3m in the year ended June 30, 2016, turning around a profit of $21.9m a year earlier and marking the first time the books were in the red since 2012. The bottom line was weighed down by impairment charges of $106.8m as the publisher of the Dominion Post, Sunday Star-Time, Press and stuff.co.nz website wrote off $66.8m from the value of its mastheads, $26.3m from buildings, plant and equipment, and $4.7m from software and websites.
Redundancy costs also featured highly at $19.3m, up from $9.4m in 2015, and the media group's provisioning for future redundancy costs in the 2017 year was $3.2m as at June 30, compared to $4.8m at the end of the 2015 year. Key management salaries rose to $2.4m from $1.9m.
Fairfax Media's New Zealand division has been in a state of flux over the past year as it seeks to merge with rival publisher and radio station operator NZME in an effort to fend off what it sees as its biggest threat in Google and Facebook, who dominate online advertising. The prospect of that took a knock when the Commerce Commission ruled against such a deal in a draft decision over the concentration of power and influence under the umbrella of one publisher.
In trying to talk the regulator around, Fairfax and NZME have downplayed the size of likely job cuts among frontline reporters, with just 10 percent to 13 percent of between $136.5m and $218.7m in estimated savings over five years to come from "a reduction in duplicated journalist roles".
Group chief executive Greg Hywood has said if the merger doesn't go ahead it will be "endgame" for the New Zealand assets, which Fairfax bought for $1.19 billion from Rupert Murdoch's Independent Newspapers Ltd in 2003, and the company has confirmed it received an unsolicited bid from a mystery buyer in a deal that's reported to have been between $100m and $120m.
Fairfax New Zealand resumed payments to its shareholder in 2016 with dividends of $31.4m paid in the year. It suspended them a year earlier when its Australian parent injected $76.5m when the local publisher rolled out a new model for its national newsrooms, dropping regional newspaper editors for regional editorial managers based in Auckland, Wellington and Christchurch to try and drive digital platforms, which it sees as replacing dwindling revenue from its traditional newspapers. The mastheads, which were once valued at $1.12b , are now valued at just $175.2m as at June 30, 2016.
When announcing the group's annual earnings in August, the New Zealand division posted underlying earnings before interest and tax of A$43.4m, compared with A$54.3m in 2015, on a 10 per cent fall in revenue to A$322.6m. At the time, Fairfax Media booked an A$981.8m write-down in the value of mastheads and other assets across Australia and New Zealand.
The New Zealand holding company's trading revenue fell 9 per cent to $351.5m in the 2016 financial year while trading expenses jumped 21 per cent to $430.6m. Stripping out depreciation, amortisation, redundancy costs, finance charges, and the impairment charge, expenses were down 8.5 per cent to $291.1m. That implies underlying earnings of $60.4m, down from $68m a year earlier.