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View Full Version : Source Interlink and the stench of death


David Adolphus
02-03-2009, 04:52 PM
In case you haven't heard--this is a huge kick in the balls to buff books, and will mean the death of more than a few. I know we have 30,00 magazines on trucks to nowhere. Yikes.


BREAKING: Source Interlink, Anderson News Shut Down Wholesale Ops
After threatening price hikes, major wholesalers exit magazine distribution biz.
Jason Fell and Dylan Stableford and Bill Mickey FolioMag.com
02/03/2009

Two weeks after threatening publishers with separate 7-cents-per-copy price hikes, a pair of major magazine wholesalers, Anderson News and Source Interlink, have decided to cease operations, according to a source at Comag.

When contacted by FOLIO:, a Source Interlink spokesperson declined to comment “on rumors.” Anderson could not be reached for comment.

Last month, a week after Anderson News announced it would increase its price by 7 cents per copy, Source Interlink said it will be raising its own per-copy distribution rates by 7 cents.

Combined, the pair account for about 50 percent of the magazine market.

Both companies gave publishers the deadline of February 1 to comply with the price hike.

Publishers and distributors balked at the idea. Time Inc. and national distributor Curtis Circulation said its publisher clients will not comply with the Anderson's 7-cent price increase. Comag, however, extended its contracts with both Anderson and Source Interlink—without the price increase.

Now, all four national distributors have stopped shipping their magazines to Anderson and Source, including Comag.

What's Next?

Magazines with on-sale dates of the week of February 2 will still be distributed. Comag is asking clients to not ship magazines with on-sale dates after that week until further notice.

According to distribution sources, Hudson News and News Group—two other major magazine wholesalers—have been working behind the scenes to pick up the business left on the table by Anderson and Source. Most of the major retailers, the sources said, are negotiating contracts.

According to these sources, Hudson News will expand into Southern California and its East Coast operations into the mid-Atlantic. Newsgroup will expand into the southeast and Chicago.

Two hours ago, retailers signed over business from Anderson to Newsgroup, including Wal-Mart, according one source.

'It's Going to Be a Mess'

But most are not expecting a smooth transition. “It’s going to be a mess for a couple of weeks,” said one major consumer publisher.

“Fifty percent of the distribution market has just evaporated,” said John Loughlin, executive vice president and general manager at Hearst magazines.

“The thing I worry about is the law of unintended consequences,” he added. “You can debate who precipitated this, but I'm a believer in free-market competition.”

Loughlin said it is going to be “very difficult to smoothly transition that tonnage of magazines to the market using alternative methods.”

He added: “I guess I'm glad I'm not publishing weeklies."

According to another source: “This is going to hit some regional magazines 100 percent. It will put
many out of business, to the extent they rely on newsstand."

“Weeklies would be hit the hardest while others will have more time to come up with another plan," John Harrington, publisher of the New Single Copy newsletter, told FOLIO:. "There will be lost sales for some issues.”

There were some publishers who felt Anderson and Source would back down from their initial demands. It appears now they were not bluffing.

“The business has not been profitable and has not been for a very long time,” CEO Charlie Anderson said in a January conference call. “What we are trying to do is give some stability to the channel. Short of that, there will be an implosion in the business."

Check FOLIOmag.com throughout the day for updates to this story.
Read the Story and Comment Now Online:
http://foliomag.com/2009/breaking-source-interlink-anderson-news-shut-down

JustinCesler
02-03-2009, 08:51 PM
hmmmmmmmm

E. John Thawley III
02-03-2009, 11:54 PM
Call me skeptical, but I bet the Source Interlink owned titles have no trouble reaching the shelves.

Raise your hand if you didn't smell something fishy two years ago when the nation's largest wholesale magazine distributor bought 70 (Primedia) magazines...

Additional info (http://www.mediaweek.com/mw/content_display/news/magazines-newspapers/e3i935c93ae376614205bf3626cb75e863a)

David Adolphus
02-04-2009, 08:12 AM
They're straight-up lying in Mediaweek. We reached an agreement with them on Friday; yesterday, they stopped delivery.

On the other hand, it could be there was more bad press than they expected, although I can't imagine how naive they'd have to be not to expect doomsday predictions. Or maybe it was just a threat.

Their stock closed at en even 12 cents yesterday, which was up 1.8 cents from Monday.

Call me skeptical, but I bet the Source Interlink owned titles have no trouble reaching the shelves.

Raise your hand if you didn't smell something fishy two years ago when the nation's largest wholesale magazine distributor bought 70 (Primedia) magazines...

Additional info (http://www.mediaweek.com/mw/content_display/news/magazines-newspapers/e3i935c93ae376614205bf3626cb75e863a)

John Jackson
02-04-2009, 12:23 PM
Call me skeptical, but I bet the Source Interlink owned titles have no trouble reaching the shelves.

Raise your hand if you didn't smell something fishy two years ago when the nation's largest wholesale magazine distributor bought 70 (Primedia) magazines...

Additional info (http://www.mediaweek.com/mw/content_display/news/magazines-newspapers/e3i935c93ae376614205bf3626cb75e863a)


+1...

Jacob Leveton
02-04-2009, 01:32 PM
As of now, I'm paid in full from them. Thank God for that!

it's an interesting time to be involved with this industry, that's for sure.

Random tidbit: http://www.slate.com/id/1007606/

Source's stock price: http://finance.yahoo.com/echarts?s=SORC#chart4:symbol=sorc;range=6m;indicat or=volume;charttype=line;crosshair=on;ohlcvalues=0 ;logscale=on

(hasn't been above $1 since October 1st)

Kevin DiOssi
02-11-2009, 10:21 AM
I assure you all that we aren't going to discontinue operation. There have been cuts and changes recently that will hopefully spawn growth, but things are beginning to look up a bit. It seems like when we're down, we get sand kicked in our face and the $.07 cents per copy has certainly had an impact on us since we put so many copies on the shelf. To combat this, we have decided to become more frugal on our distribution in places with lower sell-through. It will hopefully sort itself out, but who knows.

The most alarming factor in all of this has been our CEO's ignorance and public statements that defy common and business sense. It has soured the taste to our investors. I feel he should be removed, but he probably won't. It's like being told there is an iceberg dead ahead and he says "fuck icebergs! this is the Titanic!"

When it all comes down to it, our magazines are still making profit and we are still selling ads....somehow. There are just parts of the company that need to be looked at very closely because they are a leech.

Steve Stein
02-11-2009, 10:33 PM
Kevin,

I hear you about CEOs. My CEO made some statement to the press last week that "It could be worse if the situation we're in happened a couple years ago."

Of course, we just laid off 3500 to 4500 people right before he said this.

Bill Jurasz
02-12-2009, 08:23 AM
My ex-CEO, Hector Ruiz of AMD, is set to receive a $3 million dollar bonus once the Foundry Company is rolled out. For those that don't know, AMD is being split into two pieces, with the wafer fabrication plants becoming the "Foundry Company". Hector has been the driving force behind brokering that deal with a segment of an Arabian governmnent. That news made me realize why the recent benefits cut and salary cut made no mention whatsoever about bonuses. It was just implied "things suck and there's no money for bonuses". But aha, that's why it was left to implication -- some will still get bonuses. And on top of that, the top guy who created a lot of this mess, who helped put the company into such financial mess that selling the fabs to raise enough cash to keep the company going was a necessity is going to get a huge bonus for it. Think about that for a second, he hurt the company and is going to get a large bonus for fixing his own mistake. If it wasn't for his "leadership" direction we would be in better financial shape to weather this storm and could keep ownership of our own fabs.

Someone tell me how I can become the CEO of some company....

At least Hector is gone and can't hurt AMD any more.

David Adolphus
04-28-2009, 10:50 AM
Speaking of that Stench of Death thing...Gotta wonder what titles they'll be allowed to keep during the restructuring.

The talk from ex-Source guys here this morning is more, "What won't they get rid of?" It's a much shorter list...Super Chevy, Automobile...um...

http://www.naplesnews.com/news/2009/apr/28/bonita-springs-based-source-interlink-files-bankru/

Morgan J Segal
04-28-2009, 01:21 PM
Sounds like they are filing for bankruptcy

http://jalopnik.com/5230918/motor-trend-publisher-files-for-bankruptcy-will-privatize


More

Source Interlink Files for Bankruptcy, Will Privatize (Update3)
Share | Email | Print | A A A

By Dawn McCarty

April 28 (Bloomberg) -- Source Interlink Cos., the publisher of Motor Trend, Hot Rod and Street Chopper magazines controlled by billionaire Ron Burkle’s Yucaipa Cos., sought bankruptcy protection as it moves to become a private company.

The company, which also distributes newspapers and other publications, listed debt of $1.9 billion and assets of $2.4 billion as of April 24 in Chapter 11 documents filed yesterday in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Wilmington, Delaware.

Source Interlink publishes 75 magazines, mostly about cars and motorcycles, putting it at the nexus of two struggling industries. Iconic Motor Trend is in bankruptcy as Chrysler LLC and General Motors Corp. face a similar fate this week and next month.

“This restructuring will materially reduce our interest expense and debt levels,” Source Interlink Chief Executive Officer Greg Mays said today in a statement. The Bonita Springs, Florida-based company also runs Web sites and distributes CDs, video games and DVDs in the U.S.

U.S. magazine advertising revenue in the first quarter fell 20 percent from a year earlier, according to the Publisher’s Information Bureau, an industry group. U.S. auto sales tumbled 37 percent in March. Source Interlink hasn’t reported a profit since the second quarter of 2007.

Acquired from Primedia

The company bought the automotive magazines, as well as Surfer, Lowrider, Power & Motoryacht and Snowboarder, from Primedia Inc. in August 2007 for about $1.2 billion. It also acquired Soap Opera Digest and Soap Opera Weekly.

Primedia, controlled by private-equity firm Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co., put its magazine group up for sale to pay off debt and focus on its free auto and real estate guides. The company also sold its Channel One educational television.

Under an agreement with lenders, about $1 billion of existing debt will be canceled and about $100 million additional liquidity will be provided, Source Interlink said. The company said a lender-approved plan of reorganization will be filed.

In February, the company won a temporary court order prohibiting publishers from blocking magazine shipments to its distribution business. The publishers had objected to a 7-cent delivery surcharge, imposed by the company and since rescinded, according to court papers.

AEC Associates LLC, directly and indirectly, through Digital On-Demand Inc.; Yucaipa One-Stop Partners LP; Yucaipa AEC Associates LLC; OA3 LLC and R. Burkle, own 48.37 percent of the common stock of the company, according to court papers. Scopia Management Inc. owns 9.01 percent, Goldman Sachs Group owns 17.7 percent and the remaining common stock is owned by Dimensional Fund Advisors.

Former President Bill Clinton left his partnership with Burkle’s Yucaipa Cos. in October 2007 while U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton campaigned for president. He previously earned $15.4 million in other fees from Yucaipa since 2003, according to tax documents the Clintons released in April 2008.

The case is Source Interlink Companies Inc., 09-11424, U.S. Bankruptcy Court, District of Delaware (Wilmington).

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aDmRedq9AdQo&refer=home

David Adolphus
04-28-2009, 01:31 PM
Have filed
http://www.kccllc.net/SourceInterlink

Dave Verna
04-28-2009, 01:39 PM
Am I reading this right - it sounds like business as usual for the most part.. and no layoffs?

JustinCesler
05-18-2009, 10:52 PM
No layoffs, less debt (by a billion dollars) and much more working capital - all is well in the source world!

Kevin DiOssi
05-19-2009, 09:59 AM
No layoffs, less debt (by a billion dollars) and much more working capital - all is well in the source world!
Indeed.

Dave Verna
05-19-2009, 10:13 AM
Glad to hear!

Bill Jurasz
05-19-2009, 10:16 AM
No layoffs, less debt (by a billion dollars) and much more working capital - all is well in the source world!
Very good to hear! Now if only my employer could say the same. :( Two-plus years of losses, quarterly lay-offs, reductions to salary and benefits...