Hywood said throughout the merger process it has had a backup plan "to develop new revenue streams, recognising the ongoing structural challenges of print".
Fairfax gave up its dominance of New Zealand's online classified market when it sold out of Trade Me, which reported ebitda of $142m last year, instead using the proceeds to repay what had become an unmanageable level of debt as traditional advertising revenue collapsed.
Still, the New Zealand division adopted a digital-first strategy, writing down the value of its local mastheads to just $175.2m a year ago from as much as $1.12 billion when the one-time Australian family-owned media group purchased the Kiwi business from Rupert Murdoch's Independent Newspapers Ltd.
Hywood said Fairfax New Zealand's digital revenue had "strong momentum" with an 11 percent increase in the stuff.co.nz website's audience to 2.1 million and the Neighbourly website generating a profit in the second half of the financial year.
The stuff website is key for Fairfax NZ's pipeline of products, providing "a platform to monetise audiences through new products and businesses" such as the Stuff Fibre internet service and KPEX advertising inventory pool set up by local media companies.
The wider Fairfax group posted a net profit to A$83.9m on a 4.8 per cent decline in revenue to A$1.74b, turning around a loss of A$772.6m when it further slashed the value of mastheads and goodwill across its Australian and New Zealand operations. Operating ebitda declined 4.3 per cent to A$271.1m.
Fairfax's board declared a final dividend 2 Australian cents per share, taking the annual return to 4 cents. The ASX-listed shares rose 2.2 per cent to A$1.0325.
The Australian media group is pressing ahead with plans to spin out its Domain online real estate business, which it anticipates listing on the ASX before the end of the year. That unit and a depressed share price had attracted potential suitors for Fairfax earlier this year, but both walked away after peeking at the books during due diligence.