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The South China Morning Post (SCMP), with its Sunday edition, the Sunday Morning Post, is a Hong Kong-based English-language newspaper owned by Alibaba Group. [2] [3] Founded in 1903 by Tse Tsan-tai and Alfred Cunningham, it has remained Hong Kong's newspaper of record since British colonial rule.
Inkstone News (or simply Inkstone) was an online newspaper platform launched by Hong Kong–based company South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. (the publisher of newspaper South China Morning Post) in March 2018. It was available as a website and mobile app. [1] [2] The website called
Most papers sell at a cover price of HK$9-10, except South China Morning Post (HK$9, while the Sunday edition, Sunday Morning Post, costs HK$10). The economic recession brought about by SARS in 2003 led to some resellers pricing at $1 below the recommended price. According to the HK Newspaper Hawkers Association, the situation lasted through to ...
[1]: 127 In 1972, he became news editor at the South China Morning Post, and, after a July 1978 demotion resulting from alcoholism, [1]: 172, 173 continued on in the newsroom till 1986, returning in 2003 to write for the Post's 100th anniversary publication, Post Impressions. [1]: 153, 166 Sinclair was the author of some 24 books.
Headline Daily (Chinese: 頭條日報) is a free weekday mass-market newspaper in Hong Kong.It was launched on 12 July 2005, by the Sing Tao group, as the territory's second free Chinese-language newspaper, after Metro Daily.
Great Wall Pan Asia Holdings Limited (formerly Armada Holdings Limited, Chinese: 長城環亞控股, SEHK: 583) is a property investment company in Hong Kong. [1]The company was formerly known as SCMP Group Limited and changed its name to Armada Holdings Limited in April 2016 after it sold its media businesses, including South China Morning Post, to Alibaba Group.
In the early 1990s, the Hong Kong English-language newspaper market was dominated by the South China Morning Post and the Hongkong Standard, a distant second, both of which were seen to have begun to favour the Chinese Communist Party line on Hong Kong in the remaining few years before the handover of sovereignty in 1997.
The advertising rates in am730 are estimated to be HK$24,000 – HK$30,000, 30% to 40% lower than Metropolis Daily's rates of HK$32,000 to HK$40,000. This is a strategic action to attract more advertisements. [citation needed] From July 2013, under a six-year contract, the paper is printed by the South China Morning Post Group. [2]