Mediahuis is one of Europe’s fastest growing media groups

Antwerp-based firm which has agreed to take over INM has built up a significant publishing and broadcast media portfolio

The Mediahuis headquarters in Antwerp, Belgium. The group  employs 3,200 staff, and last year generated a turnover of €819m
The Mediahuis headquarters in Antwerp, Belgium. The group employs 3,200 staff, and last year generated a turnover of €819m

Mediahuis, which has agreed to take over Independent News & Media (INM) for €146.5 million, is one of Europe's fastest growing media groups.

It was set up in 2013 as a joint venture by long-established Belgian publishing houses Corelio and Concentra. In a relatively short time the Antwerp-headquartered firm has built up a significant portfolio of publishing and broadcast media assets, principally in Belgium and the Netherlands.

Its main titles include De Telegraaf and NRC Handelsblad in the Netherlands, where it sells almost 900,000 newspapers daily, and De Standaard and Het Nieuwsblad in Belgium, where it sells approximately 500,000 newspapers daily.

It employs 3,200 staff, and last year generated a turnover of €819 million.

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Mediahuis also operates several significant classified ad platforms in Belgium and the Netherlands, the best-known of which are Jobat, Jellow, Zimmo and Vroom.

It is also active in the Belgian radio market through the recently launched radio station NRJ and the Nostalgie radio station, which has a daily audience of 430,000 listeners in the Flemmish part of Belgium and is also the market leader in the French-speaking part of Belgium. Mediahuis also operates a series of regional TV channels.

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Mediahuis chairman Thomas Leysen also chairs Belgian financial giant KBC Group, which had to inject €1.4 billion into its Irish banking unit during the financial crisis.

He is also chairman of Brussels-based Umicore, a materials technology group that makes battery materials and automotive catalysts.

Mr Leysen’s family ventured into the media business when is father bought a bankrupt Belgian newspaper company 45 years ago.

Mediahuis said it is committed to accelerating the digitalisation of its news brands without compromising the print editions, and has successfully implemented pay walls and digital subscription services across its news sites.

On the move to acquire INM, Gert Ysebaert, chief executive of Mediahuis, said: "We believe that there is a clear rationale for the acquisition, and that INM will thrive under Mediahuis' ownership.

“Furthermore, Mediahuis can contribute the relevant experience, skills and resources to invest in INM’s brands and significantly enhance its operational and digital capabilities.

“Underpinned by our unreserved belief in independent and quality journalism, we are optimistic about the combination of Mediahuis and INM, and its potential contribution to the Irish media landscape.”

Eoin Burke-Kennedy

Eoin Burke-Kennedy

Eoin Burke-Kennedy is Economics Correspondent of The Irish Times