Wednesday, December 7, 2011

The ‘Hangover’ Part II: Business Publishers Tipped For Slower Growth

paidcontent reporting:
Bernstein Research has cut its growth forecasts for professional publishing companies, saying that the sector will suffer the same post-recession “hangover” it did following the great 2001 crash.
“Underlying revenue growth for Professional Publishers suffered from a 3-4-year “hangover” in the wake of the 2001 recession,” according to a note from the investment analyst firm. “Most names only managed to reach underlying revenue growth above the low-single-digit range (that is, above +3%) by 2005.
We think history may be repeating itself after 2009 – for all but Pearson . It would not seem unreasonable, in our view, to expect a similar pattern following the mid-09 trough, especially given 2010 and 2011-to-date data points.”
Bernstein says public companies in the sector - comprising Pearson, Thomson Reuters , Reed Elsevier and Wolters Kluwer -  will see only three percent revenue growth between 2011 and 2014, compared with the 2005-2008 average of 4.8 percent.
Still, that is not particularly a horror show - growth is growth, and this de-rating is not as pronounced as, say, that recently given to the UK economy.
Bernstein reckons Reed Elsevier’s stock price could rise by up to 30 percent if management broke up the company, though it actually expects only continued pruning. But it fancies Pearson’s increasing strength in U.S. digital education services.
http://paidcontent.org/article/419-the-hangover-part-ii-business-publishers-tipped-for-slower-growth

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