Tribune posts 8% drop in operating revenue

The media company also reports a 16% drop in operating cash flow for the first quarter. It turns a profit thanks to a one-time tax adjustment.
By Thomas S. Mulligan, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
May 9, 2008
A continued weak advertising environment resulted in an 8% decline in first-quarter operating revenue and a 16% drop in operating cash flow for Tribune Co., parent of the Los Angeles Times, KTLA-TV Channel 5, the Chicago Tribune and other media holdings.

However, because of Tribune's conversion to a tax-advantaged, employee-owned company in December, it posted a one-time, $1.86-billion income tax adjustment that resulted in net income of $1.82 billion for the quarter that ended March 31, compared with $11 million in the same 2007 period.

Quarterly operating revenue was $1.11 billion, compared with $1.21 billion a year earlier, and operating cash flow was $200 million, down from $239 million.

"Print ad revenues continue to be challenged by the weak economy's impact on real estate and classified advertising," Tribune Chairman and Chief Executive Sam Zell said in a statement accompanying Thursday's earnings report. "Broadcasting operating results are notably more stable."

In the publishing division, which includes Tribune's nine newspapers, operating revenue fell 11% to $823 million, from $936 million in the first quarter of 2007.

Advertising revenue was down 15%, with the sharpest drop -- 27% -- coming in the classified segment, where real estate ad sales fell by 41%. Operating cash flow in publishing plunged 56%, to $80 million from $184 million. The drop resulted partly from a $37-million charge for severance and special termination benefits arising from an employee buyout this year.

The broadcasting and entertainment division's operating revenue rose 3%, to $292 million, helped by higher national TV ad sales. An $83-million gain on the sale of KTLA's studio production lot helped double operating cash flow to $148 million. The division includes Tribune's 23 TV stations, the WGN cable TV superstation, Chicago's WGN radio and the Chicago Cubs baseball team.

Analysts have forecast a decent year for national TV advertising because of presidential campaign spending.

thomas.mulligan

@latimes.com





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