Financial Times FT.com

Forbes sells stake to Bono buy-out fund

By James Politi and Joshua Chaffin in New York

Published: August 7 2006 18:26 | Last updated: August 7 2006 18:26

The Forbes family has agreed to sell a large minority stake in its media empire to Elevation, the buy-out fund of rock star Bono, in a deal worth about $300m. The move highlights how private investors are seeking bargains in the struggling business of print journalism.

The deal represents a big bet by Steve Forbes, the most prominent member of the family, that outside capital and know-how will help speed the 89-year-old magazine’s transition into the digital age.

It highlights Elevation’s conviction that old media companies with strong brands should be able to recreate themselves and thrive on the web.

“We see enormous opportunities for growth on the web side,” Mr Forbes said. Some of the new capital will be used to develop new local language print and online publications in markets such as eastern Europe, China and India. “There is a growing entrepreneurial community there and we believe who gets there first will do best.”

Forbes, like other business titles, saw its circulation and advertising pages sink following the collapse of the technology bubble in 2001. This, along with the growth of its web business, led to speculation that the family might consider shutting down its print operations – which Mr Forbes strongly denies.

“One of the things we like about Elevation is that they realised that print is the core [of the business],” Mr Forbes said.

The Forbes family chose the sale of a minority stake over other solutions, such as the sale of the entire group. Although Bono, the U2 rock star, is a partner in Elevation, the main buy-out executive in the negotiations was Roger McNamee, formerly of Silver Lake Partners.

The exact terms of the deal were not disclosed on Monday but people close to the talks said Elevation would receive a 40 per cent stake in Forbes for a price between $250m and $300m. There is no mechanism for Elevation to wrench control of the media empire from the Forbes family, these people insisted.

As for Bono’s involvement, Mr Forbes said his experience in the music industry gave him a greater understanding of how digital technology was rapidly changing media. When asked if Bono, a campaigner for social justice, was a reader of Forbes, which relishes its reputation as a capitalist bible, Mr Forbes replied: “I’m told he was – and he certainly will be now.”

More from this sector

Comcast closes in on NBC stake

Empty MySpace office blow for News Corp

Google looks to ease copyright concerns

When moral ambiguity is necessary

Court order over Beatles tracks

Leaderless ITV at war with the Scots

Lachlan Murdoch pays $21m for Sydney mansion

CBS lifts advertising rates as sales pick up

Beijing tightens internet controls

View from the Top: Christina Gold, CEO of Western Union

‘Call of Duty’ set to boost Activision

Jobs and classifieds

Jobs

Search
Type your search criteria below:

Programme Director

Verizon Business

Head of Metals Consulting

Wood Mackenzie

External Affairs Director

The National Trust

Recruiters

FT.com can deliver talented individuals across all industries around the world

Post a job now