Torstar Corporation: If You Look Hard, You Can See a Bright Future

Torstar Corporation (TSX:TS.B) reported another quarterly loss May 3, but at least there was a silver lining hidden among the red ink.

| More on:
The Motley Fool

Torstar Corporation (TSX:TS.B) reported its first-quarter results May 3 and, as expected, it lost $24.4 million on $138.7 million in revenue.

Not only did Torstar lose 30 cents per share in the quarter, but it also announced that it cut 110 jobs at the company including 25 closing its Durham, Ont., printing plant operated by Metroland Media, Torstar’s community newspaper division.

These two sentences do little to convince investors that Torstar is on the mend, but if you look hard, I think you can see a bright future. Here’s why.

Smaller loss

In the same quarter a year ago, Torstar lost $53.5 million. The beleaguered media company cut its losses in Q1 2017 by more than half. Not only that, but the 110 job cuts will deliver $5.3 million in annual savings, which will help reduce losses in future quarters.

Adjusted EBITDA

If you exclude share-based compensation, amortization, depreciation, and one-time charges, Torstar’s three segments delivered $2 million in adjusted EBITDA profit in Q1 2017 compared to a $706,000 loss a year earlier. Add in the $5.3 million in savings from the job cuts, and its cash flow situation improves dramatically.

Don’t get me wrong. Torstar is still guilty of failing to make money based on generally accepted accounting practices, but taken in the context of where it’s been and where it’s going, this is progress, in my opinion.

Digital ventures

Did you know among its various non-Star Media Group and Metroland Media Group assets, Torstar had a minority interest in Nest Wealth, one of Canada’s leading FinTech companies? I didn’t. Torstar invested $1.5 million in Nest Wealth in August 2015.

Recently, I highlighted National Bank of Canada’s (TSX:NA) $6 million investment in the robo-advisor — a deal that includes the bank’s advisors using Nest Wealth’s excellent digital platform to manage their clients’ money. Digital advice is one of the fastest-growing segments of wealth management; Torstar owning a piece of this could be a diamond in the rough.

Another digital investment that could pay dividends down the road is Torstar’s 12% interest in Kanetix, one of Canada’s leaders when it comes to finding cheaper insurance. If you live in Ontario, you know how crazy insurance rates have become.

Star Touch

Since Torstar launched its tablet app in September 2015, it’s spent $24 million on a product that’s not capturing the attention of younger readers — the audience advertisers love to reach. Former CEO David Holland suggested in 2016 that Star Touch needs 100,000 unique readers using the app three to four times per week to break even.

Clearly, Torstar doesn’t want to throw money down what appears to be a black hole. To that end, it plans to spend less than $6 million on Star Touch for all of 2017 compared to $10 million and $14 million in 2016 and 2015, respectively.

Unless Torstar can figure out how to turn Star Touch into a mobile app, I expect Star Touch doesn’t have much of a future.

New CEO

On the final day of the first quarter, Torstar appointed John Boynton CEO. Boynton has a strong background in the areas that Torstar needs to exploit if it wants to survive in a digital age. As Boynton remarked in his first quarterly conference call, Torstar has some good assets, but it’s got to do a better job aligning them so they can profitably grow.

Bottom line

Some of the reports after its earnings release focused on the fact that earnings were worse than analysts expected. That might be accurate, but from where I sit, things don’t look any worse today than they did when I last wrote about Torstar in March.

If you think Torstar has a chance but are frightened by its $1.60 share price, you might want to invest in Fairfax Financial Holdings Ltd. (TSX:FFH) instead; it’s one of Canada’s best companies and owns 27.4% of Torstar’s class B shares.

Fool contributor Will Ashworth has no position in any stocks mentioned. Fairfax Financial is a recommendation of Stock Advisor Canada.

More on Investing

Business success of growth metaverse finance and investment profit graph concept or development analysis progress chart on financial market achievement strategy background with increase hand diagram
Tech Stocks

2 Canadian Growth Stocks Supercharged to Surge in 2026

Two Canadian growth stocks are flashing big 2026 potential, one riding e-commerce scale, the other surfing AI data-centre spending.

Read more »

rising arrow with flames
Investing

A Scorching Hot ETF Worth the Growth Jolt

Vanguard Mega Cap Growth Index Fund (NYSEMKT:MGK) is a popular ETF among Canadian growth investors.

Read more »

Pile of Canadian dollar bills in various denominations
Investing

2 TSX Stocks Under $50 That Could Skyrocket

With durable business models, competitive advantages, and solid growth prospects, these under $50 stocks are better positioned to skyrocket.

Read more »

Income and growth financial chart
Dividend Stocks

The Top Canadian Stocks to Buy Right Away with $45,000

Top Canadian stocks outside the basic materials and technology sectors are strong buys as the market rotates in February 2026.

Read more »

A glass jar resting on its side with Canadian banknotes and change inside.
Dividend Stocks

Canadians: Here’s How Much You Need in Your TFSA to Retire

Retirement gets clearer when you turn your TFSA into a specific income target and pick an easy portfolio to stick…

Read more »

Printing canadian dollar bills on a print machine
Dividend Stocks

Cash-Rich Canadian Companies That Thrive in Economic Downturns

Why settle for survival when you can thrive? While most stocks sell-off during a downturn, these cash-rich Canadian giants go…

Read more »

jar with coins and plant
Dividend Stocks

My Top Canadian Dividend Stocks You’ll Want to Own Forever

These Canadian companies have durable earnings and sustainable payouts, which will support their future dividend distributions.

Read more »

man looks surprised at investment growth
Dividend Stocks

Billionaires Are Selling Amazon Stock and Betting on This TSX Stock

Rapidly becoming an investor favourite, Brookfield Corp. (TSX:BN) might be the next best pick to consider for your self-directed investment…

Read more »