Times Online: Guardian Media Group to take £150m hit on Emap

"GMG and Apax are buying back debt from Emap’s lenders after a warning in the last accounts of 'significant doubt' that the publisher could continue as a going concern because of its £700m debt pile. The owners are expected to buy back more than £100m of the borrowings to give David Gilbertson, the chief executive, more freedom to seek acquisitions and invest in the business. Despite its indebtedness, Emap has fared well in the recession. Advertising revenue has fallen sharply and conference attendances have declined, but it earned close to £100m in the past 12 months, roughly the same as a year ago and enough to cover its annual £50m interest bill. However, it is at risk of breaching technical conditions, or covenants, on its loans later this year." (Disclosure: Emap is my employer.)

The Independent: B2B publishers buck downward trend with profit jumps

"Emap and Incisive Media, the trade magazine publishers owned by private equity giant Apax, are understood to have made surprise profit jumps last year. Retail Week and Local Government Chronicle publisher Emap is believed to have made about £100m pre-tax profit for the 12 months to the end of March, a marginal increase on 2008-09. Turnover was approaching £300m."

Times Online: A little war and Peace in The Guardian boardroom

"The Guardian and The Observer lost £26.8 million before various one-off write-offs in the year to March 2008. The recession means that the figure will be worse this year. ... All this has been historically propped up by other businesses, but profits at GMG's regional newspapers have collapsed by 85 per cent to less than £2 million ... Radio, always marginally profitable, is hardly faring any better. ... [and] whatever profit comes out of Auto Trader and Emap will not flow into GMG's coffers, because of the debt repayments, which does not help when the national newspapers burn through £83,000 or so a day."