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Canada's Postmedia reports wider loss, plans more job cuts

Toronto Sun and National Post newspapers are posed in front of a news stand in Toronto, October 6, 2014. REUTERS/Mark Blinch (Reuters)

TORONTO (Reuters) - Postmedia Network Canada Corp , one of the country's biggest newspaper publishers, reported a wider loss and a 13 percent fall in fourth-quarter revenue on Thursday, as slower print sales outpaced its savings from cost cuts. The publisher, which has slashed its workforce in recent years as print advertising revenue weakened, said it will cut more jobs. It launched a voluntary buyout program available to all employees as part of efforts to cut salary expenses by 20 percent, it said. The company earlier this month completed a recapitalization that saw its creditors get most of the equity in the publisher and sharply reduced its heavy debt burden. Postmedia said it had a net loss of C$99.4 million ($75.3 million) in the three months to the end of August, compared to a loss of C$54.1 million a year earlier. Revenue fell to C$198.7 million, from C$230.2 million. The company owns the National Post, Montreal Gazette, Calgary Herald, Ottawa Citizen and Sun tabloids in Toronto, Calgary, Edmonton, Ottawa and Winnipeg. The company in January cut 90 journalists, or about 8 percent of its editorial workforce, as it merged tabloid and broadsheet newsrooms in four cities after buying the Sun chain. (Reporting by Alastair Sharp; Editing by Bernard Orr)