Washington Post sale catches industry by surprise
Donald Graham, chairman and chief executive of The Washington Post Co, and the third generation of the Graham family to lead the paper, told staff about the sale late on Monday afternoon. They had gathered together in the newspaper's auditorium at the behest of the publisher, Katharine Weymouth, his niece.
"I, along with Katharine Weymouth and our board of directors, decided to sell only after years of familiar newspaper-industry challenges made us wonder if there might be another owner who would be better for the Post," Mr Graham said in a statement.
The announcement was greeted by "shock" as one of the crown jewels of newspapers was surrendered by one of the industry's royal families.
In Mr Bezos, the Post will have a very different owner, a technologist whose fortunes have risen even as those of the Post and most newspapers have struggled. Through Amazon, the retailing giant, he has helped revolutionise the way people around the world consume - first with books, then expanding to all kinds of goods and more recently in online storage, electronic books and online video, including a recent spate of original programming.
Mr Bezos is buying the Post in a personal capacity. The deal includes all of the publishing businesses owned by The Washington Post Co.
The Washington Post Co plans to hold on to Slate magazine, The Root.com and Foreign Policy magazine. Mr Bezos has asked Ms Weymouth to remain at the Post along with other key executives.
Ms Weymouth said Mr Bezos had made it clear he was not purely focused on profits.
The sale, at a price that would have been unthinkably low even a few years ago, represents the end of eight decades of ownership by the Graham family of The Washington Post since Eugene Meyer bought it at auction in 1933. His son-in-law Phillip Graham served as president of the paper from 1947 until his death in 1963. Graham's widow, Katharine Graham, oversaw the paper through the publication of the Pentagon Papers alongside The New York Times and its coverage of Watergate, the political scandal that led to the resignation of Richard Nixon.
The Post's daily circulation peaked in 1993 with 832,332 subscribers, but like most newspapers it has suffered greatly from circulation and advertising declines. By March, circulation had dropped to 474,767. The company became pressed enough for cash that Ms Weymouth announced in February that it was looking to sell its flagship headquarters.
As of last year, the newsroom, which once had more than 1000 staff, had fewer than 640.
The Post is not the only newspaper to move to new ownership recently. The New York Times Company announced on Saturday it had sold its New England Media Group, which includes The Boston Globe, for $US70 million, a fraction of the $US1.1 billion The Times Co paid for just the Globe in 1993.
Ken Doctor, an analyst at Outsell, said the Post sale reflected a trend of newspaper ownership returning to local investors rather than large, publicly traded enterprises.
"Newspapers are not really much creatures of the marketplace any more," Mr Doctor said. "They're not throwing off much in profits. They need shelter from the pressure of quarterly financial statements and reports."
New York Times
Frequently Asked Questions about this Article…
The Washington Post was sold in a surprise deal to Amazon founder Jeff Bezos for US$250 million (about $278 million). The announcement — after decades of ownership by the Graham family — shocked many because the paper is considered one of the industry’s crown jewels and the price was seen as low compared with past valuations.
Jeff Bezos, the founder of Amazon.com, is buying The Washington Post in a personal capacity. The article describes him as a technologist whose fortune grew through Amazon’s expansion from books to a wide range of online services and original programming.
The article reports that the deal includes the publishing businesses owned by The Washington Post Co. At the same time, it states The Washington Post Co. plans to hold on to Slate magazine, The Root.com and Foreign Policy magazine, according to the company.
The sale price was US$250 million (approximately $278 million). The article suggests that price levels for major newspapers have fallen sharply — a trend highlighted by comparisons like The New York Times Company’s recent sale of its New England Media Group (including The Boston Globe) for US$70 million — signaling lower valuations across the industry.
According to the article, The Washington Post’s daily circulation peaked in 1993 at 832,332 but had fallen to 474,767 by March. The newsroom workforce shrank from more than 1,000 staff to fewer than 640. Those declines in circulation and staffing point to pressure on subscription and advertising revenue, which are key metrics investors watch in the newspaper sector.
Jeff Bezos has asked publisher Katharine Weymouth to remain at The Washington Post along with other key executives. Weymouth said Bezos made it clear he was not purely focused on profits, indicating he may prioritize other goals in running the paper.
Ken Doctor of Outsell said the sale reflects a trend of newspaper ownership shifting away from large, publicly traded companies back to more local or private investors. He noted newspapers are generating limited profits and often need shelter from the pressures of quarterly financial reporting — a structural change investors should consider when evaluating media assets.
The article illustrates that traditional newspapers face long-term headwinds: falling circulation, reduced ad revenue and lower valuations. It also shows high-profile buyers may pay for strategic, technological or civic reasons, not just short-term profit. For everyday investors, that means assessing media investments requires looking at structural industry trends, potential buyer motivations and the realistic revenue trajectory for print and digital products.

