WebSideStory down; Google to offer competing software
NEW YORK — WebSideStory Inc. stock fell Monday after key competitor Google Inc. announced it will provide free Web-site usage tracking software, similar to the services Webside sells.
Shares of WebSideStory fell $1.58, or 8.8 percent, to close at $16.42 on the Nasdaq Stock Market.
San Diego-based WebSideStory provides services that track and analyze visits to Web sites.
Monday, Google said Google Analytics, formerly known as Urchin from Google, is now free.
"When you wake up one morning and someone is giving away for free what you sell ... well,” said Farmhouse Equity Research analyst C. Gregg Speicher.
However, Speicher said Google’s offering differs from WebSideStory’s higher-end services.
"These are two different business models,” Speicher said. "Google might dent some of the potential, but we went into the story knowing that.”
According to Needham & Company analyst Mark May, Urchin’s product serves smaller Web sites need a simple, self-service analytics solution, whereas WebSideStory services large online companies that need more hands-on solutions.
"There is nothing really new with today’s announcement,” said May, who also noted WebSideStory’s and Google’s different audiences. "The product hasn’t changed dramatically and free is close to $17 a month in the realm of Web analytics.”
Under pressure, Knight Ridder explores sale
NEW YORK — Newspaper publisher Knight Ridder Inc., under pressure from its largest shareholders, said Monday it would consider selling the company and other steps to boost shareholder value.
The San Jose-based publisher of The Miami Herald, the San Jose Mercury News and 30 other newspapers said it would work with longtime financial adviser Goldman Sachs & Co. to explore a possible sale and other options.
Knight Ridder also said it had changed its bylaws to allow shareholders to submit proposals at its annual meeting, currently scheduled for next April, and also to nominate directors.
In a prepared statement, Knight Ridder said there was no assurance that there would be a transaction.
Recommended for you
The company also said it didn’t intend to provide any updates on the process "unless and until” its board has approved a specific transaction. A company spokeswoman declined to comment beyond the written statement.
Last week Knight Ridder’s largest shareholder, Private Capital Management LP of Naples, Fla., threatened to nominate its own slate of directors at the newspaper publisher’s next annual meeting after receiving only a "limited response” to the "serious concerns” that it and other shareholders had raised about the company.
Private Capital Management owns 19 percent of Knight Ridder and has significant stakes in other publicly held newspaper publishers.
PCM first agitated for a sale of Knight Ridder in early November, and its call was soon seconded by Knight Ridder’s No. 3 shareholder Harris Associates LP, a Chicago-based money manager. Harris has an 8.2 percent stake in Knight Ridder.
A third shareholder, Southeastern Asset Management Inc., which holds 8.9 percent of Knight Ridder, also has said it would take a more active role in considering future options for the company.
Newspaper stocks have fallen out of favor with investors because of concerns about waning advertising and circulation as more people go online for news. Rising costs for newsprint and the consolidation of big newspaper advertisers like department stores have also affected the newspaper business. However, they remain generally profitable.
Given the dismal view that many investors have of the newspaper business, it is unclear how many bidders will emerge for Knight Ridder.
Knight Ridder’s shares had been down 20 percent this year before PCM’s initial broadside against the company in early November, in line with several other major newspaper publishers. The shares rose $1.19, or 1.9 percent, to $63.69 in active trading Monday afternoon on the New York Stock Exchange. They have traded between $54.42 to $74.07 in the past 52 weeks.
Tony Ridder, Knight Ridder’s CEO, sent a memo to the company’s staff Monday with questions and answers about the announcement, including assurances that employees would not lose their vested pension benefits if there is a change in control.
"During this period of exploring strategic alternatives, we will continue business as usual,” Ridder said. "But we also will continue to be mindful of expenses in what continues to be a difficult revenue environment.”
Knight Ridder is the second-largest newspaper publisher in the country, after Gannett Co.
———
On the Net:

(0) comments
Welcome to the discussion.
Log In
Keep the discussion civilized. Absolutely NO personal attacks or insults directed toward writers, nor others who make comments.
Keep it clean. Please avoid obscene, vulgar, lewd, racist or sexually-oriented language.
Don't threaten. Threats of harming another person will not be tolerated.
Be truthful. Don't knowingly lie about anyone or anything.
Be proactive. Use the 'Report' link on each comment to let us know of abusive posts.
PLEASE TURN OFF YOUR CAPS LOCK.
Anyone violating these rules will be issued a warning. After the warning, comment privileges can be revoked.