Thursday, September 13, 2012

Corporate: Jana Drops Barnes & Noble; Bertelsmann Eyes US and Internet; Allen & Unwin Talks to Murdoch


PublishersLunch

As of August 31, Jana Partners no longer held any shares in Barnes & Noble, the company disclosed in an SEC filing on Tuesday. The investment firm, which owned 7 million shares of the bookseller when they first filed disclosure forms in April, still held a little over 4 million shares as of their most recent previous filing at the end of June. BN's stock has been trading near a 52-week low over the past three weeks.

At Bertelsmann's annual meeting gathering hundreds of executives companywide in Gutersloh, Germany, ceo Thomas Rabe said "the group does 'not have all the skills required' to profit from the shift of media to the internet and called the company's position in the US 'insufficient,'" attendees told the FT. He wants to "do more" to increase the company's interests "in the world's leading market" (that's us). Rabe is trying to rectify what has been "low growth and low growth potential" at the company.

In potential acquisitions, Australia's Allen & Unwin is in exclusive talks to acquire Murdoch Books. Owner Matt Handbury (nephew of Rupert Murdoch) tells the Sydney Morning Herald, "I think we've got a much reduced market and our form of publishing needs to be in a bigger business where the overheads can be spread out a bit." Though Murdoch published Stieg Larsson in Australia, their focus is cooking and illustrated titles, and they laid off 26 staff members in May.

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