Archant, the publisher of dozens of titles including the Eastern Daily Press, London’s Ham & High Express and the former owner of the anti-Brexit weekly the New European, is up for sale just 18 months after being sold to a private equity group.
The Norwich-based newspaper group, one of Britain’s oldest publishers co-founded in 1845 by the mustard magnates the Colman family, was sold to the investment group Rcapital in August 2020 in a deal that promised a “bright future” for the company as the pandemic accelerated the decline in its already strained finances.
Rcapital, which during its short period of ownership sold the New European to a consortium including the former New York Times chief and BBC director general Mark Thompson and the ex-Financial Times editor Lionel Barber, has put out an information memorandum to prospective buyers and is understood to have appointed Ulmus Advisory to oversee the process.
It is understood that interest has been expressed by several groups including National World – the owner of more than 100 local and regional titles including the Scotsman and Yorkshire Post – which lost out to Rcapital when Archant was sold.
Newsquest, the UK’s second biggest regional player with 200 titles, including the Argus in Brighton, Northern Echo in Darlington and Glasgow’s Evening Times, has also expressed interest.
Reach, the owner of the Mirror, Star and Express national papers and almost 200 regional print and digital titles including the Manchester Evening News and Liverpool Echo is another potential suitor.
The involvement of Reach, which has the largest combined online readership of any UK newspaper group and in December overtook the BBC as the biggest news website by audience, could cause regulatory issues.
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