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Topic: Wealth Management

Best Canadian Stocks: High-yielding Torstar responds to market challenge

Investment counsellor

Every Tuesday we bring you “Best Canadian Stocks.” You get our specific recommendation on the stocks we profile, with a full explanation of how we arrived at our opinion. You’ll read about stocks making moves you should know about, from coverage  in one of our three newsletters featuring Canadian stocks—The Successful Investor, Stock Pickers Digest and Canadian Wealth Advisor.

Torstar has struggled in the past few years as more people get their news from the Internet, rather than newspapers. But the company is doing a good job of responding to its challenges, which should let it improve its earnings and maintain its current payouts.

TORSTAR CORP. (Toronto symbol TS.B; www.torstar.com) publishes the Toronto Star, Canada’s largest daily newspaper by circulation. It also publishes three other daily papers and over 100 weeklies.

The slow economy continues to hurt advertising sales at Torstar’s newspapers. In the quarter ended June 30, 2014, the company’s revenue fell 7.4%, to $225.6 million from $243.6 million a year earlier.

Earnings jumped 44.2%, to $18.1 million, or $0.23 a share, from $12.6 million, or $0.16 a share. However, if you disregard restructuring costs and other unusual items, earnings per share fell 4.8%, to $0.20 from $0.21.


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Investment advice: Harlequin sale will help Torstar pay down debt

These results exclude the company’s Harlequin book publishing subsidiary, which it recently sold for $455 million.

Torstar plans to use some of the cash from the Harlequin sale to pay down its debt, which totalled $180.8 million on June 30, 2014. That’s equal to 32% of the company’s market cap.

The remaining cash, as well as lower interest expenses, will let Torstar keep paying quarterly dividends of $0.13125 a share, for a 7.9% annualized yield. In the latest quarter, dividend payments totalled $10.4 million.

The company also plans to keep cutting costs, mainly through layoffs and outsourcing certain editorial functions. These moves should save Torstar $26.2 million in 2014. In addition, the company is now charging visitors to access the Toronto Star’s website unless they have a print subscription. That should help offset lower revenue from print ads.

The stock trades at just 8.9 times the $0.74 a share that Torstar will probably earn in 2014.

Torstar is a buy for long-term gains in The Successful Investor.

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Tomorrow our Investor Toolkit explains why a prepaid funeral may not be your best option.

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