Moves to make publicly-funded research available for free online could be disastrous for academic publisher Reed Elsevier and its shareholders, investors have been warned.
In July, three UK education research councils and the European Commission announced stipulations that future research partly funded by taxpayers – much of which is currently published through subscription journals – must be made more open-access. The UK government has labelled research “paywalls” “deeply unhealthy”, and wants to free up availability.
Berstein Research‘s Claudio Aspesi writes in a research note:
Reed Elsevier’s share price has gone on rising through the recent announcements due to healthy recent results…
Open-access models may be largely confined to the UK unless Europe forces member states to adopt similar policies. But, with the U.S. also planning similar moves, the publishers will need to adapt.
In May, science minister David Willets told journal publishers gathered at a Publishers Association conference:
Many researchers were already revolting against health and science journal publisher Reed Elsevier for selling bundles of journals containing their work, rather than individual journals, to libraries. Tens of thousands of people signed a petition.
Alongside Elsevier in the Reed Elsevier stable is Variety publisher RBI. Bernstein thinks Reed Elesvier, which aborted a planned RBI disposal during the worst of the downturn, should break itself up but that it is more likely to retain an RBI that continues to down-size itself.
Disclosure: Reed Elsevier is an investor in paidContent parent GigaOM through its Reed Ventures arm.