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Book part
Publication date: 30 May 2017

Pedro Aguiar

The chapter addresses the unique aspects of Brazil’s news agencies and the Brazilian news syndication market. It reveals the pattern of Brazil’s two prevailing business models…

Abstract

The chapter addresses the unique aspects of Brazil’s news agencies and the Brazilian news syndication market. It reveals the pattern of Brazil’s two prevailing business models regarding the wire services industry: that of the State, particularly the federal government, which invested little in a nationwide distributor to peripheral and alternative media; and that of major media conglomerates, which set out their syndication services labeled as “news agencies” in order to multiply profits with no extra labor. In the latter case, an asymmetrical relationship of dependency and circularity ensues between these major conglomerates and regional media groups, who rely on these “news agencies” to perpetuate their dominance in local markets. The chapter also assesses a few causes for this unique model and describes the main players in Brazil’s news agency sector. A concise historical background is presented (Molina, Morais, Saroldi & Moreira) and provides context for the present-day players in the news agency business in Brazil, including the institutional framework they form with their customers, predominantly smaller newspapers. The chapter analyzes attributes of the Brazilian news agency ecology, including the parallel reach of distribution networks belonging to the private and state-owned agencies; the adaptation of conglomerate agencies to challenges entailed by the digital convergence (shrinking newsrooms, multitasking staff); and the prevalence of the interconglomerate model within the Brazilian news syndication industry.

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Book part
Publication date: 30 May 2017

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Brazil
Type: Book
ISBN: 978-1-78635-785-4

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Book part
Publication date: 13 November 2018

Danny Whatmough

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Digital PR
Type: Book
ISBN: 978-1-78756-622-4

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Book part
Publication date: 30 May 2017

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Brazil
Type: Book
ISBN: 978-1-78635-785-4

Book part
Publication date: 30 May 2017

Sonia Aguiar

This chapter presents an overview of the Brazilian regional media groups that are characterized by cross-ownership of media outlets in the four main reference platforms for news…

Abstract

This chapter presents an overview of the Brazilian regional media groups that are characterized by cross-ownership of media outlets in the four main reference platforms for news coverage: daily print, radio, broadcast television, and Web.

The research uses institutional documents to explore the history and operating mode of the groups that own the 50 best-selling newspapers in the country. The theoretical approach is guided by the notion of “spatialization” applied to business communication by Vincent Mosco, and by the concepts of “region,” “regionality,” and “regionalization” based upon authors aligned with the critical thinking approach in the field of geography.

The study identifies the multiple geographical scales at which these groups operate, as well as their dominant business models and the sources of their owners’ capital. Based on this analysis, it argues that the variables which are applied to the large-circulation media at a national level cannot be automatically transferred to the regional and local levels.

The study of regional media reveals a landscape that has not received adequate attention from communications researchers worldwide. It also points to problems which deserve more investigation and elaboration. This represents a new challenge for media studies, for the political economy of communication, and for the nascent field of geography of communication.

This chapter provides a distinctive and nuanced approach to the Brazilian media system. It can inspire other studies on regional communication which take into account the specificities of their geographic scales.

Book part
Publication date: 8 February 2019

Nathan Lipson

As deep as we’d like to think that journalism is already embedded in the Internet way of doing things, some destructive basic print-era practices are still present in news…

Abstract

As deep as we’d like to think that journalism is already embedded in the Internet way of doing things, some destructive basic print-era practices are still present in news production. One of them is that news organizations are autarchic entities – they produce most of their content internally. As in the real economy, this inevitably leads to a huge waste of resources – exactly what news organizations cannot afford to do. And, as in the real economy, the answer is commerce. News organizations need to pool resources by creating a syndication network that will push each member to produce only content that cannot be produced by others or outsourced to others – while acquiring all the rest. This will lead to bigger revenues from selling content as well as production cost reductions that exceed the increased costs of buying content.

Book part
Publication date: 13 November 2018

Danny Whatmough

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Digital PR
Type: Book
ISBN: 978-1-78756-622-4

Book part
Publication date: 23 October 2002

Amit Bubna

Venture capitalists have both a pre- and post-investment role in their portfolio firms. If their pre-investment due diligence is non-verifiable, second opinion has to be obtained…

Abstract

Venture capitalists have both a pre- and post-investment role in their portfolio firms. If their pre-investment due diligence is non-verifiable, second opinion has to be obtained from those who can become syndicating partners and benefit from investment. But these partners are also potential competitors. Using a moral hazard model emphasizing information generation rather than information revelation, we study how these factors affect the “lead” VC's syndication decision and the efficiency of his decision. Moreover, the size and composition of VCs' network of contacts help determine the intensity of effort in due diligence and provide conditions for the choice of one VC over another.

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Research in Finance
Type: Book
ISBN: 978-0-76230-965-8

Book part
Publication date: 24 October 2013

Hae Jin Chung, Eunyoung Jang and Kwangwoo Park

This chapter examines the effect of creditors’ monitoring role on the profitability of firm acquisitions. We use the shares retained by the lead arranger of a syndicated loan as a…

Abstract

This chapter examines the effect of creditors’ monitoring role on the profitability of firm acquisitions. We use the shares retained by the lead arranger of a syndicated loan as a proxy for monitoring level. We find that acquirer announcement returns are positively related to the shares retained by the lead arranger. The effect of the lead arranger’s shares on the acquirer’s return becomes pronounced in cash acquisition deals, and when there exist financial covenants. Our results suggest that lead arrangers are important not only for monitoring loans but also for successful acquisitions by borrowers. An important policy implication of the main findings of this chapter on bank monitoring is that policy makers should design financial covenants to improve the efficiency of monitoring activities by lead arranging banks in syndicated bank loan deals.

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Global Banking, Financial Markets and Crises
Type: Book
ISBN: 978-1-78350-170-0

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Book part
Publication date: 8 February 2019

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Digitized
Type: Book
ISBN: 978-1-78973-622-9

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