Raymond Snoddy on media: Emap's sale brings a tear to the eye
It's really silly to be emotional about a company, particularly a publicly quoted one. Once they move onto the stock market, even well-run organisations, or those with a certain heritage, become mere commodities to be sold to the highest bidder. They dice companies up and call it unlocking shareholder value.
So forgive a small trickle of a tear for Emap, a media company that once
had a real knack of identifying gaps in the magazine market and
launching titles with style, determination and ambitious marketing.
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Somehow along the way, it has all gone horribly wrong. Now Emap is
heading for the corporate shredder and the undertakers have been
appointed in the shape of Nicholas Shott of Lazard, the merchant
bank.
What is under way is, of course, called a 'review of group structure'
and, as usual, a supposedly wide range of options, including a demerger,
are still being mooted.
Shott doesn't waste his time on reviews. He does auctions and is rather
good at them. Which is why, in collaboration with City PR group
Brunswick, tales of the sale and break-up of Emap were all over the
Sunday press.
That they should all appear at once, following immediately after the
announcement of the 'review', is just one of those coincidences of life.
Within a fraction of a second all the usual suspects were being lined up
as potential purchasers, including the ever-so-busy Future Publishing
chairman Roger Parry who nearly, but not quite, managed to successfully
bid for ITV.
Then there is United Business Media, and the normal assortment of
private equity groups such as Apax, Candover and Cinven. In fact, any
old reasonably plausible name that can be stirred into the mix has been
deployed to leaven the sense of inevitability about the sale.
The Observer must have cheered the undertakers greatly over
Sunday-morning coffee by attaching a whopping £2.6bn break-up
price to Emap, way higher than Friday's closing-market value, which
itself was boosted by all the excitement about the break-up.
The Emap board said on Friday it was acting only in response to 'various
unsolicited proposals'. The company's top brass also thought it clever
to send an email to staff, thousands of them journalists, warning there
would be lots of 'speculative' press coverage.
As mentioned, the weekend papers certainly were full of speculation over
the potential bidders for various parts of the business. However, Morgan
Stanley believes that selling off the business-to-business division,
which it values at £1.3bn, is the simplest approach. Emap is keen
to build momentum behind the sale and is briefing analysts that the
offers are 'real', with 'funding behind them'.
It hardly needs mentioning that the board is still searching for a chief
executive, following the exit of Tom Moloney whose crime, apparently,
was not changing fast enough. It will be amusing to see exactly what
kind of chief executive will be interested in managing pension
liabilities while Emap is scattered to the four winds.
What is certain is that we are going to get plenty of change. Business
to business is the money-making star and will have plenty of suitors.
Radio's new convert, ex-ITV chief Charles Allen, will be after Magic,
Kiss and Kerrang! Consumer magazines could be the orphans of the process
because no one is stepping forward to buy the entire company. This means
hundreds of people will lose their jobs and a number of decent magazines
will disappear.
But never mind, a lot of other people should make plenty of money.
30 SECONDS ON ... EMAP
- Emap started life in 1947 as the East Midlands Allied Press, a
regional newspaper publisher.
- The group now comprises Emap Consumer Media (which produces consumer
magazines), Emap Communications (b2b titles), Emap Advertising and Emap
Radio. The latter operates seven DAB multiplexes and shares three more
with UTV, as well as owning about 40 local commercial radio
stations.
- Emap plc's turnover last year was £1.15bn; it has about 5500
employees.
- Emap's first consumer title was Angling Times, launched in 1953. Three
years later it acquired Motor Cycle News for £100.
- It created its consumer magazines division in 1978, the year it
launched pop mag Smash Hits; the title folded last year.
- The company entered the radio sector when it bought London dance
station Kiss FM in 1990.
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