Another struggling Hearst newspaper called the San Francisco Chronicle is combining powers with Boomberg News' San Francisco bureau to launch a beefed up daily business section.
Starting eight days ago, the "Business Report" in print editions, and on both of the Chronicle's websites, will offer news and reporting from both Chronicle and Bloomberg reporters.
The Hearst-owned Chronicle can use all the help they can get from the blow they took in 2009: The daily paper took a the largest drop in circulation out of any other U.S. paper during the six-month period ending in September 2009. They lost 25.8% of their subscribers, to 251,782 of them, according to the Audit Bureau of Circulations.
Starting eight days ago, the "Business Report" in print editions, and on both of the Chronicle's websites, will offer news and reporting from both Chronicle and Bloomberg reporters.
The Hearst-owned Chronicle can use all the help they can get from the blow they took in 2009: The daily paper took a the largest drop in circulation out of any other U.S. paper during the six-month period ending in September 2009. They lost 25.8% of their subscribers, to 251,782 of them, according to the Audit Bureau of Circulations.
Will The Greenwich Time Be Kissing
Rupert Murdock's Wall Street Journal Goodbye?
Currently, the money losing Greenwich Time covers the hedge fund industry with a Wall Street Journal insert in its Sunday edition.
Will Bloomberg come to Greenwich and hone in on Greenwich Hedge Funds and regional real estate, jobs, personal finance?
Currently Bloomberg helps the Greenwich Time with a weekly local stock performance recap.
Could adding Bloomberg reports to the Greenwich Time's daily business section be an essential read for business, financial and technology coverage of Greenwich and Fairfield County?
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