News Corp. has an 'other' problem

By Angela Gunn | Published February 6, 2009, 4:38 PM

News Corp. Chairman Rupert MurdochRupert Murdoch's empire is sprawling, varied and, as everyone saw in yesterday's News Corp earnings report, hurting in the current economy. What does that mean for MySpace and the company's IGN Entertainment properties?

News Corp. files its Fox Interactive Media endeavors, which include all of those properties along with Photobucket, Hulu, Beliefnet and many more, in the "other" segment of its quarterly earnings reports. And Thursday's report was not cheerful; "other" reported a Q2 2009 adjusted operating loss of $38 million, down from a $23 million profit in Q2 2008 -- most of it due to weakness at IGN and News Digital Media (which operates mainly in Australia and has since been taken private by the company).

That Q2'08 profit, by the way, looks like a bit of an anomaly if you step back and examine more numbers. The "other" category is the only one of either at News Corp. (filmed entertainment, television, cable network programming, direct broadcast satellite television, magazines and inserts, newspapers and information services, book publishing, other) to report any income losses in FY 2008. (Interactive's numbers are especially stunning when you think about the well-publicized meltdown of the newspaper business; some of Murdoch's properties there, such as the New York Post, haven't turned a profit in years.)

The segment lost $139 million over the first half of fiscal year 2009 ($101 million for Q1 2009, in fact). The segment recorded a $42 million profit for FY 2008, preceded by a $193 million deficit for FY 2007...shall we continue? A $150 million loss in FY 2006, and a $177 million loss in FY 2005, the fiscal year in which Fox Interactive Media was founded.

According to the report, losses at Fox Interactive Media have a variety of causes, including the expensive process of growing unique users, lower subscription revenues at IGN, expansion expenses. But MySpace merited special mention in the report, specifically the launch of MySpace Music -- an expensive proposition, even without the cultural surge away from MySpace and toward rival Facebook.

Murdoch is not a foolish man -- and he's not hasty. Ironically, if anything seems clear from the earnings report, it's that MySpace is not in danger...now. News Corp is in for the long haul, and though the company may find it vexing that economic troubles hit just as the segment was pulling itself into the black, Murdoch's longtime support of the Post and his willingness to sink money into The Wall Street Journal indicate that a prestige property gets a lot of leeway, even in an economic climate that Murdoch himself described yesterday as the worst he'd seen since News Corp's founding.

However, if anyone at MySpace has an idea about how to monetize the site's millions of views per day, this would be a good time to speak up.

Comments

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Try being a known liberal on the internet, open.salon.com, cahomsyjr, and creating a membership on Fox News Channel's web site so you can provide a view other than the crass, arrogant crap he airs, ain't gonna happen! So, maybe if murdope were to have the rug pulled out from under him, at least hard enough to smack a few cracks into that greedy fat head of his, it would be doing the whole world a humongous favor! As far as My Space goes, pulled the plug and do the world a favor. What was it like 40k child molester's were thrown off the site last week, even more reason to.

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funny,

"if anyone at MySpace has an idea about how to monetize the site's millions of views per day, this would be a good time to speak up."

- anyone foolish enough to give away money making ideas to make the rich richer, are utterly s-t-u-p-i-d.

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in regards to murdock and his empire, we should not have any pity for him and them (the business entities).

perhaps, he will sell off the companies and dissolve his monopoly over the news corporations.

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This is why I sometimes believe the original owners of MySpace were smart to sell to News Corp. I'm sure they saw that in the long run millions and millions of page views would only add up to a few dollars of revenue. You can put up all the banner ads you want, but ads are so common place many people don't need ad-blockers, they just ignore them.

I don't know if there is a way to make MySpace profitable to the extent News Corp would like it to be. Unless they plan to take the Gaia approach and make the basics free and charge for the extras.

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Down with the greed-driven, narrow-minded Murodope and his hand-picked sniffing pile of sycophants!

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Hurray!!!! Now please please please go belly up. Surely there is karma. After what this feeble minded Ausie has inflicted on the world - ergo Bill O'Reilly, Fox channel,South China Morning Post, UK newspaper Today and United States book publisher Harper and Rowit is time to have the rug yanked from under their feet.

He can now get back to torturing little animals full time. Perhaps he'll take the buffoon, bill o'reilly and his loofas along w/ him.

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a dollar for every idiotic utterance from Fox News (now there's an oxymoron)

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They could charge a dollar and you get to vote on which celebrity users get fired from a catapult.

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Hey, they could charge me TWO dollars if I get to make up the list of celebrities to be vote on for the catapult. I think I would even pay $3.

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Calm down liberals. Time you're wasting here could be spent saving something elsewhere.

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