Jump to content

List of newspapers in Hong Kong

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Newspapers of Hong Kong)

This is a list of newspapers in Hong Kong. Hong Kong is home to many of Asia's biggest English and Chinese language newspapers. The territory has one of the world's largest press industries and is a major centre for print journalism.

Overview

[edit]

Popularity

[edit]

The Chinese language newspapers Headline Daily and Oriental Daily News have the highest shares in the Hong Kong newspaper market, while the Hong Kong Economic Times is the best-selling financial newspaper. The Standard, a free tabloid with a mass market strategy, is the most widely circulated English newspaper by a significant margin. Its rival, South China Morning Post, has the most paid subscribers among English-language papers in Hong Kong.

Apple Daily had one of the highest circulations before its closure in 2021. It had a feisty, tabloid style, concentrating on celebrity gossip and paparazzi photography, with sensationalist news reportage and a noted anti-government political position. The Chinese language publications were written to some degree with colloquial Cantonese phrases.[citation needed]

Media landscape and pricing

[edit]

The number of newspapers in the market has been stable for a long time. Occasional attempts to establish new types of newspaper and themed papers generally cannot compete with the established brands. However, the entry into the market of free newspapers Metropolis Daily, Headline Daily, am730, and The Epoch Times spurred competition. In September 2007, The Standard changed its business model from a traditional daily into a free-sheet, distributed in commercial districts like Central and Admiralty.[1]

Most papers sell at a cover price of HK$9-10, except South China Morning Post (HK$9, while the Sunday edition, Sunday Morning Post, costs HK$10). The economic recession brought about by SARS in 2003 led to some resellers pricing at $1 below the recommended price. According to the HK Newspaper Hawkers Association, the situation lasted through to 2008, when around 10% of sellers maintained the cut price despite the change in the prevailing economic climate. The Association urged a return to resale price maintenance.[2]

Chinese-language newspapers

[edit]

Newspapers in Hong Kong are considered to follow a particular political stance, with most being either pro-Beijing or pro-democracy. A few are neutral, or are oriented towards finance or religion. There has long been a lively tabloid sector, including Oriental Daily, The Sun and (formerly) Apple Daily.[3]

Daily print newspapers

[edit]
Newspaper Chinese name Established Type Issued Position
Ta Kung Pao 大公報 1902 in Tientsin

1938 in Hong Kong

Paid Daily State-controlled[† 1]
Sing Tao Daily 星島日報 1938 Paid Daily Pro-government
Wen Wei Po 文匯報 1938 in Shanghai

1948 in Hong Kong

Paid Daily State-controlled[† 1]
Sing Pao Daily News 成報 1939 Paid Daily Pro-government
Hong Kong Commercial Daily 香港商報 1952 Paid Daily State-controlled[† 1]
Ming Pao 明報 1959 Paid Daily Moderate
Oriental Daily News 東方日報 1969 Paid Daily Pro-government
Hong Kong Economic Journal 信報財經新聞 1973 Paid Monday–Saturday Moderate
Hong Kong Economic Times 香港經濟日報 1988 Paid Monday–Saturday Pro-government
The Epoch Times 大紀元時報 2001 Paid Monday–Friday Falun Gong, pro-democracy
Headline Daily 頭條日報 2005 Free Monday–Saturday Pro-government
am730 am730 2005 Free Monday–Friday Moderate
Lion Rock Daily 香港仔 2018 Free Monday–Friday State-controlled

Weekly or quarterly newspapers

[edit]
Newspaper Chinese name Established Type Issued Position
Kung Kao Po 公教報 1928 Paid Every Sunday Catholic, moderate
Christian Times 時代論壇 1987 Paid Every Sunday Christian, pro-democracy
Vision Times 看中國 2005 Free/paid Every Monday Pro-democracy
Passion Times 熱血時報 2012 Free Quarterly Pro-city-state

Newspaper-turned-online media

[edit]
Media Chinese name Established Printing ended Type Issued Position
HK01 香港01 2016 2022 Paid Weekly
Sky Post 晴報 2011 2023 Free Daily

Defunct newspapers

[edit]
Newspaper Chinese name Established Closed Operated Position Notes
Chinese Serial 遐爾貫珍 1853 1856 2 yrs
Chinese Mail 華字日報 1872 1946 74 yrs
Universal Circulating Herald 循環日報 1874

1959

1947

1963

72 yrs

4 yrs

Pro-reform
China 中國日報 1900 1913 13 yrs Pro-reform
The World News 世界公益報 1903 1917 14 yrs Pro-revolutionary
有所謂報 1905 1907 2 yrs
大光報 1912 1932 20 yrs
香江晚報 1921 1929 8 yrs
Kung Sheung Daily News 工商日報 1925 1984 59 yrs Pro-Kuomintang
Wah Kiu Yat Po 華僑日報 1925 1995 70 yrs Pro-Kuomintang
香港小日報 1929 1930 1 yr
南華日報 1930 1944 14 yrs Pro-Japan
Hong Kong Times 香港時報 1939 1993 54 yrs Pro-Kuomintang
華商報 1941

1946

1941

1949

1 yr

3 yrs

Pro-communist
新生晚報 1945 1976 31 yrs
New Evening Post 新晚報 1950

2012

1997

2014

47 yrs

2 yrs

Pro-communist
Ching Po Daily 晶報 1956 1991 35 yrs Pro-communist
Hong Kong Daily News 新報 1959 2015 56 yrs
Tin Tin Daily News 天天日報 1960 2000 40 yrs
Express News 快報 1963 1998 35 yrs
星報 1965 1984 19 yrs
Popular Daily 萬人日報 1975 ? ? Anti-communist
兒童日報 1989 1990 1 yr
香港聯合報 1992 1995 3 yrs
現代日報 1993 1994 1 yr
Apple Daily 蘋果日報 1995 2021 26 yrs Pro-democrat [7]
The Sun 太陽報 1999 2016 17 yrs Pro-communist [8]
Metro Daily 都市日報 2002 2019 17 yrs
Sharp Daily 爽報 2011 2013 2 yrs Pro-democrat [9]
快馬 2012 2013 1 yr

Defunct online media

[edit]
Media Chinese name Established Closed
House News 主場新聞 2012 2014
Inkstone News 2018 2021
Stand News 立場新聞 2014 2021
Citizen News 眾新聞 2017 2022
FactWire 傳真社 2015 2022

English-language newspapers

[edit]

Hong Kong is also the base of regional editions of foreign English-language newspapers. The International New York Times and Financial Times are published in Hong Kong.

From 10 September 2007, The Standard switched to free, advertising-supported distribution. The South China Morning Post[10] announced on 11 December 2015 that the Alibaba Group would acquire the South China Morning Post from Malaysian tycoon Robert Kuok, who had owned it since 1993. As of 5 April 2016, the South China Morning Post's online content became free to read.[11]

Newspapers Chinese name Established Issued Position Position
South China Morning Post 南華早報 1903 Paid Daily Moderate
Sunday Examiner 1946 Paid Every Sunday Catholic, moderate
China Daily Hong Kong Edition 中國日報香港版 1997 Paid Monday–Friday State-owned
The Standard 英文虎報 1949 Free Monday–Friday Pro-government
Career Times 1997 Every Friday

Online only

[edit]

Defunct newspapers

[edit]
Media Chinese name Established Closed Notes
The Friend of China 中國之友 1842 1859
The Hong Kong Register[12] 1843 1863
The China Mail 中國郵報, later 德臣西報 1845 1974
Daily Press 每日雜報 1864 1941
Hongkong Telegraph 士蔑報 1881 1951
The Wall Street Journal Asia 亞洲華爾街日報 1976 2017
The Star 英文星報 1965 1984
Eastern Express 東快訊 1994 1996

Newspapers in other languages

[edit]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c † The indicated news outlets are indirectly owned and controlled by the Liaison Office of the Central People's Government.[4][5][6]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Standard to become free newspaper – RTHK, 3 September 2007
  2. ^ Diana Lee, "Plea to halt newspaper price war" Archived 29 April 2009 at the Wayback Machine, The Standard, 28 March 2008, in 2013, the newspapers changed price to $7.
  3. ^ Hong Kong Early Tabloid Newspapers 香港早期小報, CUHK Library; accessed 19 May 2024
  4. ^ Betsy Tse (9 April 2015). "Basic Law violation seen as LOCPG tightens grip on HK publishers". EJ Insight. Retrieved 4 October 2020.
  5. ^ "《壹週刊》報導揭露中聯辦壟斷香港出版市場". The News Lens (in Chinese (Hong Kong)). 8 April 2015. Retrieved 20 September 2020.
  6. ^ "The Publishing Empire Helping China Silence Dissent in Hong Kong". Bloomberg News. 18 August 2020. Retrieved 20 September 2020.
  7. ^ "Take care and don't give up hope: Apple Daily staff – RTHK". news.rthk.hk. Retrieved 24 June 2021.
  8. ^ "紙媒進入凜冬,17年歷史的香港《太陽報》4月起停刊". Initium Media (in Chinese (Hong Kong)). 30 March 2016.
  9. ^ "Apple's free sister paper Sharp Daily folds after losing millions". South China Morning Post. 18 October 2013.
  10. ^ "Alibaba Buys HK's SCMP to Counter 'Western Bias'".
  11. ^ "Paywall down as Alibaba takes ownership of SCMP". 5 April 2016.
  12. ^ Sinn, Elizabeth (2002). Emerging Media: Hong Kong and the Early Evolution of the Chinese Press. Modern Asian Studies vol. 36, no. 2, pp. 421-465