The web blew up at the same time as the Reagan/Clinton/Bush financial bombs were detonating, leading to a huge private equity bubble in which super-wealthy Americans used debt financing and other forms of financial engineering to buy out successful companies, then hollowed them out, selling off their real-estate and plant, loading them up with debt, and raiding their reserve funds.
This meant that when the internet came along and started to challenge their markets, these incumbent firms were offering inferior products and had no money and no ability to borrow in order to pursue experiments to adapt to the changing market. These century-old companies had weathered many transitions in their history – the internet’s insurmountable challenges were as much the fault of debt-loading as they were anything inherent to the net.
So retail giants fell and continued to fall, and newspapers had no wiggle room to spare.
A new analysis in the Financial Times found that the majority of companies that were acquired in leveraged hedge-fund buyouts “have either defaulted, gone bankrupt or are in distress.”
The stories of these firms are bananas: they’re taken private, then put through IPOs, then taken private again, then thrown at the public markets again. At each turn, the fund managers and at least some of their investors take home giant paychecks – and the companies’ fortunes get worse and worse.
The internet was always going to challenge these businesses, but they went up against the net having been cruelly flensed of their assets, reserves, and will to live.
https://boingboing.net/2017/12/30/cooccurrence-not-causation.html
This is also pretty much why HMV have gone bust (again) this week.