The Glone and Mail - 01.08.2019

(Darren Dugan) #1

Meetthe


people


whoare


stopping


badnews


initstracks.


MCKAY FAMILY

Established the School of Health
Technology at WE College in Kenya
and supported education across the
region, empowering youth with tools
to transform themselves and their
communities.

FAITH CHEROP
STUDENT, KISARUNI GROUP
OF SCHOOLS

One of 14 siblings, Faith had to fight
for her high school education. The
first woman in her family to go to
high school and university, Faith is
paving the way for the next
generation of girls to pursue their
education and build a brighter
future for themselves, their family
and their community.

MILCAH CHEPKIRUI
STUDENT, KISARUNI
GROUP OF SCHOOLS

Graduated as valedictorian
of her high school class and
is continuing her studies to
become the first female
neurosurgeon in the Maasai
Mara, inspiring other girls to
turn their dreams to reality.

Together, they’re creating
sustainable impact
and changing lives for
generations to come.
Be part of the good news.
Join the WE community
and learn how you can
make a difference at home
or around the world.

WE.ORG
GETTOOLS.GETDOING.
Media generously provided by the Globe and Mail.

THURSDAY, AUGUST 1, 2019 | THEGLOBEANDMAILO REPORTONBUSINESS| B7


Torstar Corp.booked a $17.4-million loss attributable to
shareholders in its second quarter, as revenue dropped 11
per cent from the same time last year and restructuring
expenses increased, the company reported Wednesday.
The newspaper and digital media company’s net loss for
the second quarter was equivalent to 22 cents a share and
compared with a year-earlier profit of $4.95-million or 6
cents a share of net income.
Restructuring expenses for the three months ended June
30 totalled $13.85-million, up from $5.78-million a year earli-
er. During the quarter, the company announced it would
close its Hamilton printing and mailroom operations.
Excluding restructuring and asset impairment costs, Tor-
star’s operating loss was 2 cents a share, which was less than
analyst estimates.
The owner of the Toronto Star has been focused on find-
ing new sources of revenue to offset declines in its older
businesses – primarily sales of advertising in its daily and
community newspapers and dis-
tribution of advertising flyers.
Torstar executives told analy-
sts Wednesday on a conference
call that print advertising reve-
nue continues to decline and
revenue from flyer distribution
was also weaker during the quar-
ter, but its transition plans are on
track.
Chief executive John Boynton
said the company ended the
quarter with more than 20,000 digital-only subscribers, in
addition to 42,500 subscribers that have digital access as
part of their print package. “We’re right on expectations
with all these subscriber counts, building a more consistent,
predictable and recurring revenue stream,” Mr. Boynton
said. However, Mr. Boynton declined to reveal the average
revenue per user from the digital-only subscriptions. Simi-
larly, he wouldn’t say how many subscriptions will be re-
quired to offset lost ad revenue or when Torstar expects
overall revenue will stabilize, but said “that’s all modelled
out and at this point we’re pretty comfortable.”
In the second quarter, Torstar’s total revenue fell to
$127.2-million, from $143.2-million in the second quarter of
2018.
Its segmented revenue (excluding Torstar’s share of reve-
nue from joint ventures and VerticalScope) fell to $142.4-
million from $160.67-million a year earlier.

Torstar holds an investment in The Canadian Press as part of a
joint agreement with subsidiaries of The Globe and Mail and
Montreal’s La Presse.

THE CANADIAN PRESS

TORSTAR (TS.B)
CLOSE: 85¢, DOWN 5¢

Torstarreportslossas


restructuringcostsrise


DAVID PADDONTORONTO

We’re right on
expectations with
all these subscriber
counts.

JOHN BOYNTON
TORSTAR CHIEF EXECUTIVE

[CHINA]

Ratherbefishin’


FishingboatspreparetoleaveportinLianyungang,China,on
Wednesday,thelastdayofthecountry’ssummerfishingmoratorium

AFP/GETTY IMAGES

Airbus SEurged European
governments to step up plans
for a “likely” no-deal Brexit and
settle a long-running subsidy
dispute with the United States to
help limit trade risks for Eu-
rope’s largest plane maker.
The twin concerns surround-
ing Airbus’s cross-border factory
network prompted chief exec-
utive Guillaume Faury to issue a
warning about rising trade
tensions even as he unveiled
stronger than expected second-
quarter profit.
Airbus builds wings for com-
mercial aircraft in Britain, where
new Prime Minister Boris John-
son has promised to lead the


country out of the European
Union on Oct. 31 whether he has
secured a negotiated departure
or not, fuelling speculation in
currency markets of a disorderly
Brexit.
Airbus has built a stockpile of
about one month’s supply of
aircraft parts as a buffer to cope
with Britain leaving the EU
without a transitional deal, Mr.
Faury said.
Plane parts are exempt from
default World Trade Organiza-
tion tariffs under a 1980 pact
signed by both the EU and Bri-
tain in its own right. But Airbus
is worried extra red tape could
slow supply chains and hamper

the movement of engineers.
Mr. Faury also sounded a
broader alarm about rising
global tensions and in particular
recent U.S. threats to impose
sanctions on European planes
and other goods in the wake of
WTO rulings against European
government subsidies to Airbus.
He called for a settlement in
the long-running dispute, while
Airbus included a warning in its
results for the first time of dam-
age to deliveries and finances if
the punitive tariffs go ahead.
The EU is gearing up to impose
countertariffs after the WTO
ruled separately against U.S.
subsidies to Boeing.REUTERS

STRONGAIRBUS PROFITCLOUDEDBYU.S.SUBSIDYBAT TLEANDFEARSOFNO-DEALBREXIT

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