Marie Claire and NME publisher IPC Media has reported a 75% fall in pre-tax profits for 2012, in part resulting from a £24.8m writedown in the value of the company's assets.
Even stripping out the exceptional impairment charge the UK's biggest magazine publisher still endured a tough year, with operating profits down 24% year-on-year to £28.2m.
Revenues at the publisher, which is owned by the US media giant Time Warner but is set to be spun off along with its other publishing assets, fell 5% to £314m.
The company paid no dividends last year, in 2011 it funnelled a healthy £51.5m back to its parent company.
Staff costs rose slightly, from £86.7m to £89.6m, as total staff numbers stayed almost flat at 1,760. Of those 747 are classified as editorial employees.
The 11 company directors were paid a total of more than £2.8m. The un-named highest paid director received £766,000 in 2012, down on the £820,000 paid out in 2011.
IPC paid £22,000 in UK corporation tax paid at 24.5%, down from £441,000 in 2011.
The company has a 50% joint venture European Magazines Limited, the primary activity of which is to publish the UK edition of Marie Claire.
This venture made a pre-tax profit of £193,000 last year, a 44% year-on-year drop from the £347,000 in 2011.
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