Generated by GPT-5-mini| International Business Times | |
|---|---|
| Name | International Business Times |
| Type | Online newspaper |
| Format | Digital |
| Founded | 2006 |
| Founders | Etienne Uzac; Johnathan Davis |
| Headquarters | New York City |
| Language | English |
| Owner | Newsweek Media Group (past); IBT Media; Newsweek; Imperial Media Group |
International Business Times International Business Times is a global digital news publication covering business, finance, markets, technology, and politics. Founded in 2006, it expanded internationally with bureaus in New York, London, Sydney, and Hong Kong while competing with legacy outlets for readership worldwide. The publication has intersected with media conglomerates, regulatory scrutiny, and high-profile reporting on corporations, central banks, and financial crises.
The publication was launched in 2006 amid shifting media landscapes influenced by digital disruptors such as The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, Bloomberg L.P., Financial Times, and Reuters. Early expansion paralleled growth of online rivals including HuffPost, Business Insider, Quartz (publication), Forbes, and CNBC. By the 2010s IBT opened international editions in cities like London, Sydney, Hong Kong, Singapore, and Mumbai, mirroring strategies used by The Guardian, The Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, and Al Jazeera English. Ownership changes involved media companies similar to transactions by Gannett, Tronc, Tegna, Hearst Communications, and mergers reminiscent of Time Inc. and Meredith Corporation deals. Coverage during major events referenced institutions and episodes such as Lehman Brothers, European sovereign debt crisis, Bank of England, Federal Reserve System, European Central Bank, and the 2008 financial crisis.
Corporate structure evolved through ownership changes comparable to those experienced by Newsweek, The Atlantic, Vox Media, BuzzFeed, and Vice Media. Founders included Etienne Uzac and Johnathan Davis, later joined by executives with past roles at firms like CNN, NBCUniversal, Thomson Reuters, Associated Press, and Dow Jones & Company. Investments and acquisitions invoked comparisons to deals involving Axel Springer SE, Daily Mail and General Trust, Condé Nast, Hearst, and Bertelsmann. Governance and legal matters intersected with regulatory bodies including Securities and Exchange Commission filings for comparable media companies and litigation similar in profile to cases involving Gawker Media and The New York Post. Editorial leadership shifted among editors who previously worked at outlets such as The Guardian, Financial Times, Bloomberg News, Reuters, and The Wall Street Journal.
Coverage spans corporate reporting on companies like Apple Inc., Microsoft, Amazon (company), Alphabet Inc., Tesla, Inc., Facebook (Meta Platforms), and Alibaba Group. Markets and finance articles reference indices and institutions such as the Dow Jones Industrial Average, S&P 500, NASDAQ, Shanghai Stock Exchange, Bank for International Settlements, and the International Monetary Fund. Technology reporting connects to firms and events including Samsung, Intel, NVIDIA, CES, Mobile World Congress, Microsoft Build, and Apple Worldwide Developers Conference. Political and policy coverage has engaged with actors like Donald Trump, Joe Biden, Barack Obama, Theresa May, Angela Merkel, and Xi Jinping, and events such as Brexit, Chinese economic reform, and summits like the G7 and G20. Investigative pieces have touched on corporations, banks, regulators, and legal matters tied to entities like Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase, Deutsche Bank, and Credit Suisse.
The outlet produced reporting on significant episodes comparable to coverage of Enron, WorldCom, Bernie Madoff, and the Panama Papers investigations by other media. Controversies involved editorial disputes, fact-checking debates, and management litigation that resembled disputes seen at BuzzFeed News, The New York Times, and The Guardian. High-profile stories prompting responses came alongside corrections and legal threats similar to those faced by The Washington Post and Wall Street Journal. Corporate governance and ownership controversies echoed public disputes in cases like Newsweek and Gawker Media restructurings. Reporting on cyber incidents paralleled coverage by Wired (magazine), Krebs on Security, and outlets that covered breaches affecting firms such as Equifax and Yahoo!.
The publication developed a digital strategy akin to platforms used by HuffPost, BuzzFeed, Vox Media, TheSkimm, and Quartz (publication), leveraging social distribution on networks such as Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, YouTube, and Instagram. Audience metrics were tracked using analytics similar to Comscore and Google Analytics measurements; partnerships and syndication resembled arrangements between Reuters and national broadcasters like BBC News, Sky News, ABC News (US), and CBS News. Mobile initiatives paralleled apps and newsletters comparable to those from The New York Times, Axios, and The Washington Post, while SEO and content optimization mirrored tactics by Forbes and Business Insider. International editions addressed regional markets including India, Australia, United Kingdom, United States, Hong Kong, and Singapore.
The outlet and its journalists have been acknowledged in contexts similar to journalism honors such as the Pulitzer Prize, George Polk Awards, Peabody Awards, Overseas Press Club Awards, and recognitions from institutions like the Society of Professional Journalists and Online News Association. Individual reporters and editors formerly associated with the publication have connections to award-winning work at Reuters, Bloomberg News, The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, and The Guardian.
Category:Online newspapers