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News Corp trying to quit MySpace

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Wed, 29 Jun 2011 2:22p.m.

MySpace - not even a tenth as popular as Facebook these days (Reuters)

MySpace - not even a tenth as popular as Facebook these days (Reuters)

News Corp is aiming to sell struggling social network site MySpace this week after three years of massive losses, according to a person familiar with the matter. The move will likely result in the layoff of more than half of the site's remaining 500 workers.

It's a jarring goodbye for a once-hot internet property, which News Corp CEO Rupert Murdoch predicted four years ago would eventually make US$1 billion in annual revenue. MySpace never reached that goal. This year, MySpace is expected to make less than a fifth of that as ad sales plummet, according to research firm eMarketer.

MySpace's crash coincided with Facebook's rise - due in large part to its cleaner interface, smoother operation and better integration with other services. MySpace was generally clunky, slower and littered with display ads. It was also slower to adapt.

At least three bidders are still in the running for MySpace - online advertising network operator Specific Media, private equity fund Golden Gate Capital and Austin Ventures, an investment fund that is working with MySpace co-founder Chris DeWolfe. The company hasn't chosen a buyer yet, according to the person, who was not authorised to comment publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity.

News Corp is looking to cut a deal Wednesday or Thursday in order to have it completed in its fiscal year, which ends Thursday.

Earlier, the News Corp.-owned website All Things D reported that MySpace was on the verge of being sold for US$20 million to US$30 million. The person said the deal price will likely be much higher and include a combination of cash and stock.

Any sale around that price would mark a stunning reversal from 2005, when News Corp bought the promising startup for US$580 million when social networking was in its infancy.

Facebook has turned into the dominant social media platform with more than half a billion users. A recent investment by private fund GSV Capital Corp. valued Facebook at US$50 billion. LinkedIn, a social network for professionals, recently went public and now has a market capitalisation of about US$8 billion.

The low estimate for MySpace suggests there may only be residual value in its brand, technology and declining visitor base, said Debra Aho Williamson, principal analyst with research firm eMarketer.

"It shows that this is just something that News Corp wants to get off of its books at any price it can get," she said.

MySpace unveiled an extensive overhaul in October in an attempt to transform itself into a hub for consuming entertainment content, but it didn't help reverse visitor declines. In January, it slashed nearly half its staff, or about 500 people, in hopes of returning to profitability.

The site still lost money. For the three months through March, the News Corp segment that includes MySpace lost US$165 million. That was worse than the US$150 million loss it posted a year earlier, mainly because of lower advertising revenue at the site. That marked the 11th straight quarterly loss since mid-2008, over which time the segment lost about US$1.4 billion cumulatively.

MySpace CEO Mike Jones is the last remnant of a three-person executive team that came in to fix the site in April 2009. It is unclear if Jones will stay on after a sale.

According to tracking firm comScore, MySpace had 74 million visitors from around the world in May, down 32 percent from a year earlier. By comparison, Facebook had 1.1 billion, up 26 percent; Twitter had 139 million, up 54 percent; and LinkedIn had 86 million.

News Corp shares rose 25 cents, or 1.5 percent, to close Tuesday at US$17.17.

AP

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Comments

29 Jun 2011 03:00p.m.

TWE wrote:

MySpace was horrible, giving people the option of customising every part of their page is a terrible idea because almost everyone overdoes it and the page itself becomes unreadable through all the junk people pile onto it. Facebook's clean interface wins hands down. Murdoch must be absolutely spitting that his predictions failed so utterly and he's set to lose hundreds of millions by getting rid of it.