Simplest way to do it if you just want to peruse the last 4 years..
<a href='https://finance.yahoo.com/quote/NYT/financials?p=NYT'>https://finance.yahoo.com/quote/NYT/financials?p=NYT</a>
I wouldn't expect anyone to know this, but in Wall Street circles the New York Times once-controversial paywall is considered a brilliant piece of business process "innovation". To me personally it's not so brilliant, but Wall Street pays attention to "number go up" as their measuring stick for "brilliance". Current CEO of Microsoft is considered a "genius" when all he's really done is raise prices on his stuck legacy customers.
Now for the COMPLETE look at just how screwed NYTimes was for an entire DECADE of blogs destroying their business (2000-2009) you'd have to compile the last 20 years of their financials into a spreadsheet.
ditr@moneybutton.com will be going thru putting together your own spreadsheet for companies you like-- it's called our Icon series and the first episode will be out in the next 2 weeks. Ground-zero episode in this series will be how to assemble the PROPER number of shares for an equity (what VCs call the "cap-table"). We'll have many more episodes in that series showing people how to do the more-rigorous valuation work which can support the knowledge you already have about a sector or product.
Simplest way to do it if you just want to peruse the last 4 years..
<a href='https://finance.yahoo.com/quote/NYT/financials?p=NYT'>https://finance.yahoo.com/quote/NYT/financials?p=NYT</a>
I wouldn't expect anyone to know this, but in Wall Street circles the New York Times once-controversial paywall is considered a brilliant piece of business process "innovation". To me personally it's not so brilliant, but Wall Street pays attention to "number go up" as their measuring stick for "brilliance". Current CEO of Microsoft is considered a "genius" when all he's really done is raise prices on his stuck legacy customers.
Now for the COMPLETE look at just how screwed NYTimes was for an entire DECADE of blogs destroying their business (2000-2009) you'd have to compile the last 20 years of their financials into a spreadsheet.
ditr@moneybutton.com will be going thru putting together your own spreadsheet for companies you like-- it's called our Icon series and the first episode will be out in the next 2 weeks. Ground-zero episode in this series will be how to assemble the PROPER number of shares for an equity (what VCs call the "cap-table"). We'll have many more episodes in that series showing people how to do the more-rigorous valuation work which can support the knowledge you already have about a sector or product.