Reuters in crisis
Ravi Madapati
Faculty Member
Icfai Knowledge Center
Reuters, the financial information
firm seems to be in serious trouble, with a loss of $740 mn in 2002. Three
thousand two hundred jobs have been cut during the period 2001 and 2002 and
another 3000 have been planned in 2003. The company’s fall has been sudden.
Competition has snatched market share. Reuters’ core business, the terminals it
serves, has fallen by 18%. Reuters’ average revenue from each terminal is down
to a quarter of Bloomberg’s. Technology spending has decreased and this has hit
Reuters hard. Reuters has not faced such a bleak situation in its 150-year-old
history.
“We are pleased with the progress we made this quarter in what continues to be
a tough market. Revenues were in line with our expectations and we saw some good
sales wins. Fast Forward is gaining momentum, and I personally am focused on
creating a fast, accountable, service-oriented team at Reuters.”
—Tom Glocer, Chief Executive,
Reuter Group[1]
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In early 2003, Thomas Glocer (Glocer), wondered why
the optimism generated by the completion of 150 years of Reuters had died
in little less than a year. Reuters, the financial-information firm headed
by Glocer, seemed to be in serious trouble, with a loss of $740 mn in
2002, 3200 jobs had been cut during the period 2001 and 2002 and another
3000 planned in 2003.The company’s fall had been sudden. Until 1997,
Reuters had been the undisputed leader in its market. With 40% of the
world market [2] it dwarfed Bloomberg, its upstart American competitor.
But since then, Bloomberg had doubled its market share at the expense of
Reuters. Reuters’ electronic share-trading operation, Instinet had
accumulated substantial losses. Reuters’ core business, the terminals it
served, had fallen by 18%. Reuters’ average revenue from each terminal was
down to a quarter of Bloomberg’s. |
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Reasons behind the fall
For a long time, Reuters’ grip on news and financial
information had been ironclad. But by the end of 2002, its market
capitalization plunged by almost 90% from its peak of € 34.4 bn. In July 2002,
Reuters posted its first loss since becoming a public company about 18 years
back. Reuters not only made a loss but it almost lost its place in the FTSE-100
index. It lost a billion-dollar contract with Merrill Lynch to Thomson
Financial. The precipitous fall of this famous information provider had no
simple explanation with analysts citing many reasons. Gloomy equities markets
had reduced the subscription to the firm’s brokerage services. A weak economy
had reduced the demand for investment banking services. Institutional investors
had reduced their exposure, which resulted in weak demand for its asset
management services. Even before the post-bubble downturn hit financial firms,
bank mergers had led to a consolidation of trading rooms and cancelled Reuters’
contracts. Since then, lay-offs had hastened the trend. Reuters’ news service,
which earned 10% of revenues, was hurt by the slump in the media business.
But some analysts believed that Reuters’ cyclical troubles were only hiding
more serious structural problems. At the higher end of the market, Bloomberg
had snatched business from Reuters, offering one product, sold at one price
compared to Reuters’ many offerings. Bloomberg’s service was also perceived to
be superior to Reuter’s and its colorful terminals were also trendier compared
to the conservative look and feel of Reuters. During boom times most banks had
let their traders keep both the terminals; but when crunch time came, most
stuck with Bloomberg. At the same time, the bottom end of the market had been
commoditized by a combination of Internet start-ups and newer operators such as
Thomson Financial (Thomson), Moneyline, Telerate and Proquote. Such companies
sold cheaper, more basic packages to clients who did not need sophisticated
packages. Proquote charged about $200 a month for its most basic service. Even
Reuters’ news service was no longer indispensable. A trader could get the news
from a much cheaper source such as Dow Jones Newswire. With 2,500 journalists
in 198 bureaus, this was proving to be a costly business for Reuters.
In fall 2002, Reuters lost out after a bitter contest with Thomson to replace
Merrill Lynch’s (Merrill) archaic in-house market-data services in a contract
valued at $ 1 bn. The terms were not disclosed but industry experts speculated
that Thomson had undercut Reuters by as much as $50 mn a year. Reuters alleged
that Thomson appeared to be desperate to save its business and hence such heavy
undercutting. But many industry specialists felt that the loss of the contract
was symbolic of the reversal of fortunes at Reuters. With cost-cutting a
priority among its customers, Reuters had been fighting to maintain market
share in a highly competitive business. Reuters seemed to be increasingly
squeezed between the premium data service operation of Bloomberg LP, which
charged customers with multiple terminals $1,350 a month, and the lower-priced
services of providers such as Thomson Financial, whose services cost about $500
a month.
Reuters had been seeking to reduce the costs of delivering information and
upgrade the analytics[3] — so that it could move into less expensive products.
The loss of the Merrill Lynch contract was one more setback for the company.
More than 90% of Reuters’ revenue came from sales to the financial services
industry, either directly or through its stake in Instinet. The rest came from
sales of the company’s news services to other news organizations.
Though Reuters remained relatively strong in the news and equities businesses,
Bloomberg had redefined the rules of the game. Reuters’ terminals were packed
with information but left users to draw their own conclusions from the data.
Bloomberg believed users wanted tools for applications such as calculating the
return on securities and comparing investment options. So Bloomberg established
a new business to supply terminal concept to his ex-colleagues in Wall Street
and abroad. By combining real-time prices with the tools that Reuters lacked,
he met an unfulfilled customer need. Like Reuters a century earlier, Bloomberg
rolled his core product out to a broad base before adding text-based news whose
quality rivaled what Reuters and others offered.
Reuters meanwhile, was feeling the negative impact of size and success. The
company had missed market trends like instant messaging, which Bloomberg added
to create another industry standard. In trying to become everything to
everybody in the information-services game, Reuters had found itself caught
between players like Bloomberg focused on the premium segment and Thomson, who
used price as its lead weapon.
Glocer’s challenge
Future outlook
[1] Reuters First Quarter Revenue Statement, April 16, 2003.
[2] The Economist, February 28, 2003, Is Reuters Terminally ill?
[3] Analytics are the equations allowing traders to get customized portraits of a given security.
© Icfai Press. Global CEO •September 2003, All Rights
Reserved.
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