From newspaper to toilet paper, Happy 178th birthday The Shit Times!



SINGAPORE: Daily circulation numbers of SPH Media titles were found to have been inflated by between 85,000 and 95,000, or about 10 to 12 per cent of the reported daily average circulation, The Straits Times reported on Monday (Jan 9).
There were instances where copies were printed, counted for circulation and then destroyed, as well as double-counting of subscriptions.
The practices came to light during a review on internal processes in March 2022.
In response to CNA's queries, an SPH Media spokesperson said: "Some inconsistencies in the reporting of the data were discovered, and we have immediately taken steps to strengthen processes.
"The staff involved had been taken to task, or had left the organisation."

Dear people in the media,
You DO realise what is happening to you right? You are being sidelined by the biggest newsmaker in Singapore, the G, which also happens to be supporting your operation with State funds. You’ve never had much of a say in media-G relations, but god knows your predecessors tried. And we were lucky that politicians at the time know the value of a credible media, even as they try to hem us in in other ways. They know that they need to get out there and answer questions. They were quick to hold press conferences (as opposed to the briefing which is a kind of gag order which the media doesn’t seem to know how to negotiate). They were okay about taking questions at the sidelines.
Now they ignore you entirely, in the hope that no answers mean no story. They tell you to look at…



One of Singapore’s biggest media this morning rejected legal claims by a group of anti-vaxxers that it published false information about the coronavirus.
Singapore Press Holdings said it would defend itself against a meritless lawsuit filed late last month by a group called Healing the Divide over an opinion piece by its senior health correspondent urging differential treatment of the unvaccinated.
“We have received the legal notice. We believe that there is no basis for the application. We stand by our report and will defend this rigorously,” SPH told Coconuts today.
The lawsuit was announced by the group yesterday, which said it filed it under Section 15 of the Protection from Harassment Act.
“As the main source of information in this country, we feel that they have both a legal and moral obligation to present the facts regarding COVID-19 and the pandemic and we would like to hold them to…
IN PICTURES: Iris Koh, founder of the Healing the Divide group, leaves the Police Cantonment Complex after being offered bail of S$20,000.








A view of the Singapore Press Holdings (SPH) building in Toa Payoh. (File photo: TODAY/Najeer Yusof)
SINGAPORE: Singapore Press Holdings (SPH) will transfer its media business into a not-for-profit entity amid the ongoing challenge of falling advertising revenue, the company announced on Thursday (May 6).
The restructuring exercise involves transferring the entire media-related business of SPH to a newly incorporated wholly owned subsidiary, SPH Media Holdings.
The transfer involves relevant subsidiaries and employees, the News Centre and Print Centre and their respective leaseholds, as well as related intellectual property and information technology assets.
SPH will provide the initial resources and funding to capitalise SPH Media with a cash injection of S$80 million, S$30 million of SPH shares and SPH REIT units, and SPH's stakes in four of its digital media investments.
Speaking at a virtual dialogue organised by Sias, or the Securities Investors Association (Singapore) to address shareholder queries on Thursday evening, he said that options such as privatisation or selling the media business had indeed been considered.
However, any party that takes over the media business will be subject to the same challenges the company is facing in the media landscape, particularly the secular decline in print advertising revenue. Being in a commercial company whose shareholders expect a fair return was therefore not viable for the media business, said Mr Ng.
Transferring the entire media-related business to a company limited by guarantee, or CLG, will allow profits to be reinvested in the company rather than being distributed to shareholders.
"So this is how we came to a solution that requires us to find a sustainable future for the media business," he said. He added that the CLG model will present more opportunities for the business to raise funds.
SPH, which publishes The Business Times, had announced in May that it will transfer its entire media-related business to a CLG. The move was the result of a strategic review announced in March, amid structural changes that had severely disrupted the traditional business model, which had relied on print advertising revenue.
With the loss-making media business hived off, SPH is expected to benefit from its non-media assets, prompting queries as to why a "profitable business" should be handed over to Keppel Corporation.
Keppel had made a S$2.2 billion bid to privatise SPH's non-media business. The deal, which values SPH at S$3.4 billion, will take place through a scheme of arrangement, subject to SPH shareholders first approving its media restructuring plan.
Under the scheme, SPH shareholders will receive a total consideration of S$2.099 for each SPH share they own. This will consist of cash of S$0.668, 0.596 Keppel real estate investment trust (Reit) unit (valued at S$0.715) and 0.782 SPH Reit unit (valued at S$0.716).
Mr Ng said that while there is a plan to grow the non-media business on its own, the company had gone through the process of evaluating over 20 offers for its non-media business in order to get the best value for shareholders.
Addressing queries on Keppel's offer, Mr Ng said that while he understands that an all-cash offer may be favoured, none of the offerors had proposed such a deal.
SPH had said that the offer price of $2.099 per share represents a premium of about 40 per cent based on the last trading price before the announcement of SPH's strategic review on March 30.
Shareholders will also get to benefit from steady dividend yields in the 4 per cent range, based on the historical averages, for SPH Reit and Keppel Reit.
SPH will hold a virtual extraordinary general meeting at 2.30 pm on Sept 10 to seek shareholders' approval on its proposed restructuring and formation of a new constitution.
Shares of SPH ended Thursday at S$1.95, up S$0.02 or 1 per cent.
