Weak print advertisement revenues weighed heavy on Postmedia‘s fourth quarter results, and the media company doesn’t expect any improvement next year, as it works to turn around its operations.
The owner of several big city newspapers, including the National Post, Vancouver Sun and the Ottawa Citizen, said losses from continuing operations deepened to $35.8 million in the fourth quarter, or 89 cents per share.
That compares to a loss of $28.4 million, or 70 cents per share, in the same period a year earlier.
Postmedia said revenues slid to $169.3 million from $190.1 million.
Much of the decline was driven by lower print advertising revenues, which fell 16.2% in the three month period, with the weakness stretching across all of its major advertising categories.
National print advertising fell 20.3%, while retail ads dropped 14%, classified were down 16.7%, and insert ads declined 7.3%.
“We anticipate the print advertising market to remain challenging and expect current trends to continue into fiscal 2014,” the company said in its financial documents.
Quarterly revenues from sales of its newspapers dropped 3.6%, it said.
Postmedia has been cutting costs across its operations as part of a three-year program to transform its money-losing business.
For the year, the company says it has managed to reduce operating costs by about 12%, or $82 million.