Nikkei, Japan’s largest media company, is to buy the FT Group from Pearson for £844m, after stunning its rival bidder Germany’s Axel Springer with an eleventh hour offer for the London-based global news organisation.

Key details

(FILES) An illustrative file photo taken...(FILES) An illustrative file photo taken in London, on December 11, 2012 shows copies of the Financial Times newspaper. British publisher Pearson is in "advanced" talks to sell its flagship business newspaper the Financial Times to an unnamed suitor, it announced on July 23, 2015. AFP PHOTO / LEON NEALLEON NEAL/AFP/Getty Images
© AFP

● Pearson will sell the FT Group to Nikkei Inc for £844m, payable in cash

● The FT Group includes the FT newspaper, FT.com and publications including How to Spend It magazine, the FTChinese website and specialist publications such as the Banker and Money-Media

● Pearson will make a £90m contribution to its pension fund

● The agreement does not include FT Group’s London headquarters at One Southwark Bridge

● It also does not include Pearson’s 50 per cent stake in The Economist Group

The deal marks the end of an era, bringing the curtain down on Pearson’s 58-year ownership of the Financial Times at a time of upheaval in the global media industry.

The battle for the FT turned into a duel between Nikkei and Axel Springer, two groups keen to develop their international presence with a move into the English-language market.

Axel Springer has been in talks with Pearson for nearly a year, while Nikkei only entered the picture in the last five weeks. But two people close to the situation said the German company did not know it had been trumped by Nikkei until 15 minutes before the cash-rich Japanese company’s deal with Pearson was announced.

Pearson’s former chief executive, Marjorie Scardino, famously said the newspaper would be sold ”over my dead body”. Her successor, John Fallon, who took over in January 2013, always stopped short of delivering such a full-throated defence of Pearson’s ownership.

In recent years, as the company has focused on consolidating its status as the world’s largest education business, it has sold many of its media assets, such as Les Echos, the French media group.

The deal comes at a time of dramatic change in the global media industry. Traditional newspapers are seeing print circulation and advertising revenues decline while digital upstarts and big technology companies like Google are increasingly moving into the business of generating and delivering news.

Hands-off owner hands over FT after 58 years

Financial Times website

The Financial Times has covered countless takeovers since its creation in 1888, and detailed waves of consolidation, asset-swapping and covetous moguls in its own industry. Yet — despite perennial speculation — it has not changed hands since 1957,

Continue reading

Mr Fallon said on Thursday “we’ve reached an inflection point in media, driven by the explosive growth of mobile and social. In this new environment, the best way to ensure the FT’s journalistic and commercial success is for it to be part of a global, digital news company.”

He added that Pearson’s ability to “preserve the FT’s editorial independence and integrity isn’t enough”, and the newspaper would be better served by an owner that could invest in its global journalism.

The agreement will bring the FT into the same stable as The Nikkei, Japan’s biggest-selling business newspaper, with 3.12m subscribers.

Tsuneo Kita, chairman and group CEO of Nikkei, said: “Our motto of providing high-quality reporting on economic and other news, while maintaining fairness and impartiality, is very close to that of the FT. We share the same journalistic values. Together, we will strive to contribute to the development of the global economy.”

Lionel Barber, FT editor, said: “The FT is a world-class asset. I am confident that working together with our new proprietor will ensure that it remains so.”

Mandatory Credit: Photo by WITT/SIPA/REX Shutterstock (4914344b) Tsuneo Kita Nikkei Economic Conference, Tokyo, Japan - 08 Jun 2013
Tsuneo Kita

The deal covers the FT newspaper, FT.com, and titles such as The Banker and Investors Chronicle, but does not include the FT Group’s London headquarters at One Southwark Bridge and the FT Group’s 50 per cent stake in The Economist Group, which publishes The Economist news magazine.

The FT has fared better than many rivals, with its total circulation across print and digital rising more than 30 per cent over the past five years to 737,000. Pearson said on Thursday that FT Group contributed £334m of sales and £24m of adjusted operating income to Pearson last year.

As part of the deal with Nikkei, which is privately held, Pearson will make a £90m contribution to its group pension plan, and the company said it had made a commitment to funding the pension plan to self-sufficiency in the near term.

Staff Bylines, FT Editor, Lionel Barber.
Lionel Barber

Pearson said the balance of the proceeds from the transaction would be used for general corporate purposes and investment in its global education strategy.

Pearson shares, which have fallen one-fifth since March, were up 2.1 per cent at £12.34 in London. “The company is not performing well overall, so disposing of an asset would obviously be good news,” said one banker.

The FT has an editorial team of 580 journalists in more than 50 locations around the world. It was first published as a four-page newspaper in 1888 and was bought by Pearson in 1957.

Pearson was advised by JPMorgan Chase, Evercore Partners, Goldman Sachs and the law firm Freshfields. Nikkei was advised by Rothschilds and Skadden Arps.

Letters in response to this report:

Editor’s continued independence is key to FT / From Geoffrey Owen, Richard Lambert and Andrew Gowers

May the rising sun shine on you / From Nick Handley

Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2024. All rights reserved.
Reuse this content (opens in new window) CommentsJump to comments section

Follow the topics in this article

Comments