- Investors Wait for ECB Clues on Crisis Steps Pullback
- US Commercial Real Estate to Bottom in 2010: Survey
- Costco's October Same-Store Sales Top Expectations
- Toyota Posts Surprise Profit, Cuts Annual Loss Forecast
- BNP Paribas Quarterly Profit Surges, Tops Forecast
- House Democrats Clear the Way for Health Care Vote
- US Senate Votes to Extend Jobless, Housing Aid
- Cisco CEO: Tech Sector Hit Bottom, Recovery Under Way
- Look Ahead: Choppy Trade Likely, Cisco to Boost Techs
- Adidas Out At UCF After MJ's Son Wears Jordans
- Cisco Jumps; Rest of Market to Follow?
- Gold Will Hit $1,500 By June 2010: Strategist
- Crescenzi: Fed Conditions Its Commitment on Rates
- Three Way to Play the Dollar Carry Trade
- Study Reveals What's Really Going on in Aisle Six
- Time Warner Raises Forecast, Focuses on Exploiting Content
- Do You Buy Marchionne's Turnaround Plan?
- Call It 'Microsoft Math'
- Statoil partners with China in Gulf of Mexico
- Fraport Q3 net profit falls 55 percent
- Wet weather delays harvest from Midwest to South
- EU agrees on new Internet user rights
- Skanska Q3 profit falls 6 pct in weak market
- Democrats' plan to help 'uninsurables' questioned
- Belgium hit by rail strike, many riders stay home
- How to apply for homebuyer tax credit
- Norske Skog's net loss narrows 63 pct in Q3
NEW YORK - The Wall Street Journal will close its Boston bureau to save money, and shift coverage of the mutual fund industry to its money and investing reporting team, the newspaper's editor said on Thursday.
"The economic background is painfully obvious to us all," Journal Managing Editor Robert Thomson told the paper's employees in a memo. "That there has been truly great reporting... out of Boston over many, many years is not in doubt. But we remain in the midst of a profound downturn in advertising revenue and thus must think the unthinkable."
News Corp, which owns the Journal, will keep sister news organizations Dow Jones Newswires and MarketWatch in Boston, the memo said. An investigative reporting operation for the Journal will remain too, Thomson said.
Nine bureau reporters at the Journal would have to apply for other jobs, the memo said.
A Journal spokesman declined to say how much money the closure will save.
There are no plans to close other U.S. or international bureaus, Thomson wrote. The Journal has 16 U.S. bureaus and 23 outside the United States.
Boston is a financial services hub, home to some of the world's largest mutual fund firms, closely held Fidelity Investments and Sun Life Financial's MFS Investment Management
The closing comes in the same month the Journal reported that it was one of the few U.S. newspapers to report a circulation gain -- of 0.6 percent -- for the six-month period ending in September, compared with last year.
Additionally, the Journal said on Tuesday that it will stop selling its U.S. edition in London, and will offer a redesigned version of its European edition later this year.
Many U.S. newspapers are shedding jobs as advertising revenue falls and circulation declines as more people get their news online for free instead of paying for it in print.
The New York Times Co said earlier this month that it will cut 100 jobs through buyouts, and possibly layoffs, from its namesake newspaper's editorial operations.
The Journal charges for access to its online edition, and News Corp Chief Executive Rupert Murdoch has redoubled his international newspaper empire's efforts to charge for news online. The Journal recently began charging for many of its articles for people who read them on mobile devices.
- The Oracle of Omaha is placing his bets on these 15 stocks, the biggest holdings of Berkshire Hathaway.
- The mass of man-made debris orbiting the Earth is dramatically increasing the risk of space collisions.
- Here are the world's most secretive tax havens, according to the Tax Justice Network.
- The Apple App Store's market dominance reaches a new milestone: 100,000 apps now available.
- A Harvard professor’s unusual confectionary is blowing away chocolatiers in Paris.
- One MIT graduate thinks you probably don’t smile enough, and she has invented a painful device to take care of that problem.









