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Dagens Næringsliv

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Dagens Næringsliv
Dagens Næringsliv
Tore Sætre · CC BY-SA 4.0 · source
NameDagens Næringsliv
TypeDaily newspaper
FormatTabloid/Broadsheet
Founded1889
OwnerNorges Handels og Sjøfartstidende AS (Schibsted group origins)
HeadquartersOslo
LanguageNorwegian
Circulation60,000 (print, variable)
Websitedn.no

Dagens Næringsliv is a Norwegian national newspaper primarily covering business, finance, and politics with a strong presence in Oslo, Bergen, Trondheim, and Stavanger. The paper occupies a position among Norway's major titles alongside Aftenposten, VG (Verdens Gang), Bergens Tidende, and Stavanger Aftenblad, and engages readers interested in markets and corporate affairs tied to institutions such as Norges Bank, Equinor, Telenor, Statkraft, and Yara International. Founded in the late 19th century, it has intersected with events involving NATO, the European Economic Area, the Oslo Stock Exchange, and national policymaking around petroleum and aquaculture linked to Petoro and SalMar.

History

The paper traces roots to 1889 amid a Norwegian press landscape that included Aftenposten, Dagbladet, and Verdens Gang while Norway navigated unions with Sweden and developments related to the Union between Sweden and Norway (1814–1905), the Independence of Norway (1905), and interwar politics involving figures like Johan Nygaardsvold and Christopher Hornsrud. During World War II the Norwegian press faced censorship under German occupation of Norway, alongside titles such as Arbeiderbladet and Nasjonal Samling-era publications, and postwar reconstruction saw engagement with industrial players like Kongsberg Gruppen and shipping interests represented by Wilh. Wilhelmsen. In the late 20th century the paper covered privatizations and corporate changes involving Statoil (now Equinor), the growth of Schibsted-era media consolidation, and debates around the European Free Trade Association and European Economic Area. Recent decades brought reporting on financial crises with ties to DNB ASA, sovereign wealth debates linked to the Government Pension Fund of Norway, and scandals implicating firms like Danske Bank, PwC, and hedge funds active on the Oslo Stock Exchange.

Ownership and Organization

Ownership evolved through media consolidation seen in groups such as Schibsted, A-Pressen and family-owned holdings comparable to Orkla ASA structures; boardroom links have involved corporate actors like Telenor Group executives and investors similar to those behind KLP. The publisher has negotiated labor relations with unions such as Norwegian Union of Journalists and Fagforbundet while operating editorially alongside other titles including E24 Næringsliv and business sections of Aftenposten. Management and newsroom organization reflect practices used by international outlets like Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Economist, and Bloomberg News, and the paper participates in press industry bodies such as the Norwegian Press Association and regulatory frameworks influenced by laws like the Freedom of the Press Act.

Editorial Profile and Content

The editorial line emphasizes reporting on corporate governance, capital markets, and public policy comparable to coverage by Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal, and Handelsblatt, while profiling leaders such as Jens Stoltenberg, Erna Solberg, Kari Elisabeth Kaski, and business figures like Svein Richard Brandtzæg and Jon Fredrik Baksaas. Regular coverage includes sectors represented by Equinor, Yara International, Aker ASA, Telenor, Hydro (Norsk Hydro), SalMar, and Marine Harvest (now Mowi ASA), and follows regulatory developments involving Finanstilsynet, Skatteetaten, and international frameworks such as OECD tax initiatives. Cultural and opinion pieces engage voices tied to institutions like University of Oslo, BI Norwegian Business School, and think tanks such as NUPI and Cicero, while investigative and data journalism draw on tools and methods similar to those used by ICIJ, ProPublica, and The New York Times》.

Circulation and Distribution

Print circulation historically placed the paper among Norway's leading dailies alongside Aftenposten and VG, with distribution networks covering Oslo and regional hubs such as Bergen, Trondheim, Stavanger, and supply chains involving logistics firms comparable to Posten Norge. Subscriptions, single-copy sales, and corporate bulk deliveries to offices in the Oslo financial district and trading floors linked to the Oslo Stock Exchange form the revenue mix supplemented by advertising from sectors like banking (e.g., DNB ASA), shipping (e.g., Wilh. Wilhelmsen), and energy (e.g., Equinor). Circulation trends mirror those affecting peers such as Bergens Tidende and Adresseavisen amid broader shifts documented in media reports on readership and market share compiled by organizations like Mediebedriftenes Landsforening.

Digital Presence and Innovations

The digital strategy includes a paywall model and subscriber services paralleling digital transformations at The New York Times, Financial Times, and The Washington Post, with platforms providing real-time market data, subscription apps for iOS and Android, and multimedia productions similar to initiatives by BBC News and Reuters. Partnerships and technical choices echo collaborations with data providers such as Bloomberg, Thomson Reuters, and analytics firms used across outlets like Aftenposten and VG (Verdens Gang), while experimenting with newsletters, podcasts, and databases akin to those produced by ProPublica and The Guardian. Investments in investigative data journalism have involved tools and methodologies comparable to projects by ICIJ and the Paradise Papers-era reporting collaborations.

Notable Investigations and Impact

Reporting has led to major revelations and public debates comparable in impact to work by ICIJ, The Guardian, and Süddeutsche Zeitung, exposing issues tied to tax practices, corporate misconduct, and political lobbying involving actors such as PwC, DNB ASA, Equinor, and international banks like Danske Bank. Investigations influenced regulatory scrutiny by Finanstilsynet and parliamentary inquiries in the Stortinget, and contributed to legal actions and corporate governance reforms reminiscent of cases involving Siemens, Walmart, and GlaxoSmithKline. The paper's investigative collaborations and scoops have been cited by domestic institutions including Norges Bank, Skatteetaten, and academic researchers at University of Oslo and NHH (Norwegian School of Economics), amplifying debates on transparency, taxation, and accountability in Norway and across Scandinavia.

Category:Newspapers published in Norway