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Socpresse was a French corporation which controlled the conservative daily newspaper Le Figaro, the weekly magazine L'Express, 40% of the weekly Le Journal du Dimanche, Valeurs Actuelles, and the football club FC Nantes. The company was acquired by the Dassault in September 2006. Before that date, 13% of the shares belonged to Aude Ruettard, the granddaughter of Robert Hersant.[1] After the acquisition, Dassault sold off most of the company, retaining Le Figaro and FC Nantes; in 2011, Dassault renamed its remaining core media assets Groupe Figaro.[2]
In total, the Socpresse group owned about 70 newspapers. A partial list includes:[3]
- Le Bien Public (via Société Delaroche, a fully owned subsidiary)
- Le Maine Libre (via société d'exploitation du Maine Libre, a 99% owned subsidiary)
- Nord Matin (via the 98% owned subsidiary Presse Nord)
- La Voix du Nord, Nord Eclair, Nord Littoral, L'avenir de l'Artois, L'Indépendant du Pas de Calais
- Le Courrier de l'Ouest
Socpresse also owned 27% of the newspaper company Est Républicain, a company that controls La Liberté de l'Est, Le Journal de la Haute-Marne, Dernières Nouvelles d'Alsace, Le Journal de la Haute-Marne. It had a 49% ownership stake in the local TV station TV Nantes Atlantique; and also owns the web sites sport24.com and evene.fr.
References
edit- ^ Socpresse-le Figaro Web site of the School of Journalism of Lille
- ^ Joux Alexandre (2017). "Stratégies de marques et stratégies éditoriales du Groupe Figaro". Réseaux (in French). 2017/5 (205): 117–143. doi:10.3917/res.205.0117. Retrieved 5 October 2020.
le choix en 2011 du nom Groupe Figaro, pour remplacer celui, historique, de la Socpresse, est symbolique de l'investissement stratégique du groupe dans sa marque phare
- ^ Socpresse Observatoire français des médias