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Advertising and sales revenues at the Sun and the Sun on Sunday fell by 23% to £324m in the year to 30 June 2020. Photograph: Mike Kemp/Corbis via Getty Images
Advertising and sales revenues at the Sun and the Sun on Sunday fell by 23% to £324m in the year to 30 June 2020. Photograph: Mike Kemp/Corbis via Getty Images

Rupert Murdoch writes down value of Sun newspapers to zero

This article is more than 2 years old

Move follows £200m loss caused by Covid-19 pandemic and one-off charges related to phone hacking

Rupert Murdoch has written down the value of the Sun newspapers to zero as the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic helped to fuel a £200m loss at his flagship tabloid titles.

Advertising and sales revenues at the Sun and the Sun on Sunday plummeted, with turnover falling by 23% from £419.9m to £324m in the year to the end of June 2020.

The torrid market conditions, coupled with one-off charges related to ongoing legal action over allegations of historical phone hacking, led to pretax losses almost tripling from £67.8m in 2019 to £201.4m.

As a result News Group Newspapers, the subsidiary of News UK that operates the two titles, wrote down their value to zero. The £84m non-cash “impairment of publishing rights” essentially means the publisher does not believe the titles will return to positive growth.

More than 80% of the Sun’s losses, about £164m, were one-off charges mostly related to phone hacking. They included £52m in fees and damages paid to civil claimants, double the £26m paid out in 2019, and a £26m in costs accounted for as “UK newspaper matters”.

The Sun paid a substantial sum on Thursday to settle a phone-hacking claim brought by the former Liberal Democrat MP Simon Hughes, who claimed reporters wanting to out his sexuality had targeted him illegally.

“The company is exposed to libel claims in the ordinary course of business and vigorously defends against claims received,” News Group said. “The company makes provision for the estimated costs to defend such claims when incurred and provides for any settlement costs when such an outcome is judged probable.”

It was not able to stem losses despite cutting sales and marketing costs by 40%, and cutting staff numbers from 605 to 546. “The company will continue to take various steps intended to offset the impact of Covid-19 by reducing variable costs and implementing cost-savings initiatives,” it said.

The Sun, which Murdoch acquired in 1969 and celebrated its 50th anniversary two years ago, lost its title of the UK’s bestselling newspaper to the Daily Mail last year. It had been the nation’s most popular newspaper since 1978, spawning memorable splash headlines such as Freddie Starr Ate My Hamster, Gotcha!and It’s The Sun Wot Won It – the 1992 front page taking credit for the Conservatives’ unexpected general election victory.

There was better news for the Times and the Sunday Times, which managed to boost pre-tax profits from £3.7m in 2019 to £10.3m in the year to 28 June 2020. The titles managed to minimise the annual decline in revenue to £20m, with the £330m reported in 2019 falling to £310m last year.

“The decrease in revenue was due to challenging market conditions, with declines in both newspaper circulation and in print advertising, in line with other businesses in the sector and wider economy,” said Times Newspapers Ltd, the News UK subsidiary that operates the titles.

“This was partly offset by strong growth in digital subscription revenue as well as digital advertising revenue, supported by the implementation of price increases on the Sunday Times during the period.”

This article was amended on 14 June 2021. A change in pretax losses from £67.8m to £201.4m means they almost tripled, rather than “more than tripling” as an earlier version said.



More on this story

More on this story

  • Judge rejects Sun publisher’s bid to delay Prince Harry phone-hacking case

  • Hugh Grant settles court claim against Sun publisher for ‘enormous sum’

  • The Sun loses £66m amid costs from phone-hacking scandal

  • Sun stands by Huw Edwards story and is investigating Dan Wootton, MPs hear

  • News UK hires lawyers to look at claims against former Sun columnist

  • Sun and Mail publishers examine claims against journalist Dan Wootton

  • Andy Coulson advising Huw Edwards’s family on crisis management

  • The Sun finds itself in line of fire over report on Huw Edwards

  • Prince Harry’s media war continues with phone-hacking claim against Sun

  • Sun publisher sets aside further £128m to cover phone-hacking cases

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