Print Media Is Dead, Earnings Drive Share Prices, And Avoid Apple

 | Feb 13, 2013 05:58AM ET

Repetition breeds retention.

And right now, there are three investment warnings that I need to repeat so your portfolio doesn’t suffer the consequences of any unfortunate memory loss.

And to really drive my points home, I’m going to throw in some telling graphics, too.

So let’s get to it…

Print is Officially Dead
Back in September 2012, I announced that print media officially died.

Readers balked at my proclamation… but the proof keeps piling up.

For example, after 80 years, Newsweek went out of print in December 2012.

Regional newspapers keep folding, too. One of the most recent deaths involved the 143-year-old News & Messenger in Manassas, Virginia.

Who pulled the plug? None other than Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway.

Hmm… if Mr. Buffett thinks newspapers are a bad investment, chances are, he’s right.

Turns out the data supports such a stance, too.

From 2002 to 2012, print advertising shrunk by 12%, while magazine spending decreased by 5%. But over the same period, internet advertising jumped by 15%.

Heck, one digital company’s ad revenue alone dwarfed the ad revenue of the entire U.S. newspaper and magazine industries. And remember, since advertising always follows eyeballs, Americans have clearly given up on print media.