Funding Journalism

2nd, UPDATED edition, 2020

News consumption in Slovakia is high compared to other countries in Europe. More than two-thirds of Slovaks read news portals, newspapers or news magazines in 2017. Slovaks are also avid consumers of television, which remains the most dominant news medium in the country, but radio is also popular.

At the same time, the print media industry continues to experience a dramatic decline in Slovakia. Between December 2013 and August 2019, the daily newspaper market lost nearly over 38% of the sold copies, while regional dailies suffered even steeper declines.

The most influential players on the Slovak news media market, measured by their financial power, are the government (which controls the system of license fees for the public broadcaster and also gives subsidies and state advertising contracts to the media) and several private actors, mainly politicians and financial groups, according to the 2020 edition of the report.

With the exception of several private players, the amount of public funding dwarfs the turnover of most media companies in Slovakia,Marius Dragomir, CMDS’ director and the report’s author, wrote.

In the past two years two major trends characterized the Slovak news media market: the decrease of foreign ownership and the further consolidation of the oligarchic power. The most important event was the purchase of Markiza TV, Slovakia’s most watched and most profitable media company, by PPF Group, a powerful financial conglomerate controlled by the Czech oligarch Petr Kellner. Another important deal was the sale by Ringier Axel Springer, a Swiss-German publisher, of Novy cas, Slovakia’s most read newspaper, to Anton Siekel, an oligarch connected with Slovakia’s powerful financial and investment groups.

Following these two deals, the participation of foreign companies in the Slovak news media market is practically reduced to a single player, Ringier, which decided to narrow its focus to a clutch of online media, including its most important asset, Aktuality.sk, which has become the most read news portal in Slovakia,” the report states.

Two large financial groups, Penta Investments and J&T also have a strong influence in the Slovak news media. In the 1990s both reaped spectacularly high profits from state companies. They have vested interests, doing business with the government, especially in regulated sectors such as healthcare and energy.

Other prominent players in the Slovak news media sector are a small group of businessmen and politicians, including Andrej Babis, prime minister in the Czech Republic.

According to the report, “news is not highly profitable in Slovakia, with six of the ten largest companies in the market incurring losses in the period 2014-2018, but a lucrative subscription-based model is emerging, primarily in digital publishing.

The most popular non-tabloid daily in Slovakia, Sme is also moving towards this model as their print circulation steadily declines. Encouragingly for the news business, DennikN, a news outlet established in 2014 by a group of breakaway reporters from Sme, continued to boost its profitability in recent years thanks to a paywall model that helped them break even in only two years after launch. Its publisher became in 2018 the fourth most lucrative news business in the country, an incredible performance for such a young player.

Download the 2nd edition of the Funding Journalism
section of the Media Influence Matrix Slovakia report (2020)


1st edition, 2018

The largest players on the Slovak media market in terms of funding are the government (which controls the system of license fees for the public broadcaster and also gives subsidies and state ad money to the media) and several private actors, including foreign media houses, politicians and financial groups. Financially, the government retains a leading position with over €100m of public money invested in the media, according to the latest available data from 2016. Most of that is in the form of public funding allocated to RTVS, the Slovak public broadcaster. With the exception of several private players, the amount of public funding dwarfs the turnover of most media companies in Slovakia.

Photo by Hans Permana

Two large financial groups, Penta Investments and J&T, have been increasing their participation in the media in the past few years. Penta Investments, particularly, controls via two companies a large portfolio of print titles and websites. The company repeatedly claimed that they view media purely as a business. They are said to be eying even more acquisitions. Penta Investments and J&T in the 1990s reaped spectacular profits off taxpayer money through state companies. They have vested interests, doing business with the government, especially in regulated sectors such as healthcare and energy.

The two main foreign players are American owned Central European Media Enterprises (CME), which controls the most popular TV channel in Slovakia, and Swiss-German publisher Ringier Axel Springer, which owns the most popular daily Novy cas, and the biggest online server, Azet.sk, along with a big portfolio of entertainment titles. However, both are planning to exit the news market. CME is reportedly planning to sell its operations, possibly to a group of oligarchs from Slovakia and the Czech Republic whereas Ringier Axel Springer announced plans to sell most of its print news media to focus solely on online portals. Some of those are news portals, of which the most popular is Aktuality.sk, the four most read website in the country.

A big technology player is Slovak Telekom, the largest advertiser in the country and one of the biggest companies in Slovakia with revenues of some €670m and net earnings of €61m in 2016. They own the second largest portal by audience, Zoznam.sk, and a popular tabloid news website.

Other prominent players in the Slovak news media sector are a small group of businessmen and politicians, including Andrej Babis, prime minister in the Czech Republic.

News is not highly profitable in Slovakia, with six of the ten largest companies in the market incurring losses in the period 2012-2016, but a lucrative subscription-based model is emerging, primarily in digital publishing. The most popular, non-tabloid, daily in Slovakia, Sme is moving toward that model as their print circulation steadily declines. DennikN, a news outlet established in 2014 by a group of breakaway reporters from Sme, claims that they have reached profitability thanks to a paywall model.

Download the 1st edition of the Funding Journalism
section of the Media Influence Matrix Slovakia report (2018)