Best Publishing Stocks to Buy Now (2025)
Top publishing stocks in 2025 ranked by overall Zen Rating. "A" Rated stocks have returned an average of +32.52% per year, and are the best publishing stocks to buy now. Learn More.

Industry: Publishing
A
Publishing is Zen Rated A and is the 11th ranked industry out of 145 stock market industries
Learn how the Zen Ratings work
Ticker
Company
Zen Rating
Value
Growth
Momentum
Sentiment
Safety
Financials
AI
1w Zen Rating
1m Zen Rating
3m Zen Rating
1y Zen Rating
SCHL
SCHOLASTIC CORP
BCBDBBCBCBC
WLY
JOHN WILEY & SONS INC
BCCCBCBBBBB
NYT
NEW YORK TIMES CO
BCCCBCBCBBB
PSO
PEARSON PLC
BCCBCCCCBB
GCI
GANNETT CO INC
CCCCCBCCCCC

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Use the proven Zen Ratings quant model to find stocks with high potential to beat the market. Stocks Zen-Rated "A" have beaten the market by +32.52% annually. Learn More

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Publishing Stocks FAQ

What are the best publishing stocks to buy right now in Apr 2025?

According to Zen Ratings, our proprietary rating system that evaluates 115 factors proven to drive growth in stocks and assigns each stock in our system an overall letter grade as well as 7 individual Component Grades for Value, Growth, Momentum, Sentiment, Safety, Financials, and proprietary AI algorithms, the 3 best publishing stocks to buy right now are:

1. Scholastic (NASDAQ:SCHL)


Scholastic (NASDAQ:SCHL) is the #1 top publishing stock out of 8 with a Zen Rating of B. Stocks with a rating of B have had an average return of +19.88% per year. Learn more.

The Component Grade breakdown for Scholastic (NASDAQ:SCHL) is: Value: C, Growth: B, Momentum: D, Sentiment: B, Safety: B, Financials: C, and AI: B.

Scholastic (NASDAQ:SCHL) has a Due Diligence Score of 33, which is 13 points higher than the publishing industry average of 20.

SCHL passed 10 out of 38 due diligence checks and has average fundamentals. Scholastic has seen its stock lose -53.92% over the past year, underperforming other publishing stocks by -47 percentage points.

2. John Wiley & Sons (NYSE:WLY)


John Wiley & Sons (NYSE:WLY) is the #2 top publishing stock out of 8 with a Zen Rating of B. Stocks with a rating of B have had an average return of +19.88% per year. Learn more.

The Component Grade breakdown for John Wiley & Sons (NYSE:WLY) is: Value: C, Growth: C, Momentum: C, Sentiment: B, Safety: C, Financials: B, and AI: B.

John Wiley & Sons (NYSE:WLY) has a Due Diligence Score of 20, which is equal to the publishing industry average of 20.

WLY passed 6 out of 38 due diligence checks and has weak fundamentals. John Wiley & Sons has seen its stock return 9.9% over the past year, overperforming other publishing stocks by 17 percentage points.

3. New York Times Co (NYSE:NYT)


New York Times Co (NYSE:NYT) is the #3 top publishing stock out of 8 with a Zen Rating of B. Stocks with a rating of B have had an average return of +19.88% per year. Learn more.

The Component Grade breakdown for New York Times Co (NYSE:NYT) is: Value: C, Growth: C, Momentum: C, Sentiment: B, Safety: C, Financials: B, and AI: C.

New York Times Co (NYSE:NYT) has a Due Diligence Score of 46, which is 26 points higher than the publishing industry average of 20.

NYT passed 17 out of 38 due diligence checks and has strong fundamentals. New York Times Co has seen its stock return 13.23% over the past year, overperforming other publishing stocks by 20 percentage points.

New York Times Co has an average 1 year price target of $60.67, an upside of 24.16% from New York Times Co's current stock price of $48.86.

New York Times Co stock has a consensus Strong Buy recommendation according to Wall Street analysts. Of the 3 analysts covering New York Times Co, 66.67% have issued a Strong Buy rating, 0% have issued a Buy, 33.33% have issued a hold, while 0% have issued a Sell rating, and 0% have issued a Strong Sell.

What are the publishing stocks with highest dividends?

Out of 4 publishing stocks that have issued dividends in the past year, the 3 publishing stocks with the highest dividend yields are:

1. Scholastic (NASDAQ:SCHL)


Scholastic (NASDAQ:SCHL) has an annual dividend yield of 4.88%, which is 2 percentage points higher than the publishing industry average of 2.84%. Scholastic's dividend payout is stable, having never dropped by more than 10% in the last 10 years. Scholastic's dividend has shown consistent growth over the last 10 years.

Scholastic's dividend payout ratio of 133.3% indicates that its high dividend yield might not be sustainable for the long-term.

2. John Wiley & Sons (NYSE:WLY)


John Wiley & Sons (NYSE:WLY) has an annual dividend yield of 3.36%, which is 1 percentage points higher than the publishing industry average of 2.84%. John Wiley & Sons's dividend payout is stable, having never dropped by more than 10% in the last 10 years. John Wiley & Sons's dividend has shown consistent growth over the last 10 years.

John Wiley & Sons's dividend payout ratio of 189.9% indicates that its dividend yield might not be sustainable for the long-term.

3. Pearson (NYSE:PSO)


Pearson (NYSE:PSO) has an annual dividend yield of 1.95%, which is -1 percentage points lower than the publishing industry average of 2.84%. Pearson's dividend payout is not stable, having dropped more than 10% ten times in the last 10 years. Pearson's dividend has not shown consistent growth over the last 10 years.

Pearson's dividend payout ratio of 36% indicates that its dividend yield is sustainable for the long-term.

Why are publishing stocks down?

Publishing stocks were down -1.26% in the last day, and up 0.45% over the last week.

We couldn't find a catalyst for why publishing stocks are down.

What are the most undervalued publishing stocks?

Based on the Valuation rating, one of the 7 components of a stocks overall Zen Ratings grade, which evaluates factors including estimated earnings yield, earnings before interest and taxes/enterprise value, cash flow yield, free cash flow to price, and price-to-earnings growth (PEG ratio), the 3 most undervalued publishing stocks right now are:

1. Pearson (NYSE:PSO)


Pearson (NYSE:PSO) is the most undervalued publishing stock based on its Valuation Rating of C. Valuation is one of 7 Component Grades used to calculate the overall Zen Rating.

Pearson has a valuation score of 43, which is 30 points higher than the publishing industry average of 13. It passed 3 out of 7 valuation due diligence checks.

Pearson's stock has gained 24.84% in the past year. It has overperformed other stocks in the publishing industry by 31 percentage points.

2. New York Times Co (NYSE:NYT)


New York Times Co (NYSE:NYT) is the second most undervalued publishing stock based on its Valuation Rating of C. Valuation is one of 7 Component Grades used to calculate the overall Zen Rating.

New York Times Co has a valuation score of 0, which is -13 points higher than the publishing industry average of 13. It passed 0 out of 7 valuation due diligence checks.

New York Times Co's stock has gained 13.23% in the past year. It has overperformed other stocks in the publishing industry by 20 percentage points.

3. Scholastic (NASDAQ:SCHL)


Scholastic (NASDAQ:SCHL) is the third most undervalued publishing stock based on its Valuation Rating of C. Valuation is one of 7 Component Grades used to calculate the overall Zen Rating.

Scholastic has a valuation score of 43, which is 30 points higher than the publishing industry average of 13. It passed 3 out of 7 valuation due diligence checks.

Scholastic's stock has dropped -53.92% in the past year. It has underperformed other stocks in the publishing industry by -47 percentage points.

Are publishing stocks a good buy now?

50% of publishing stocks rated by analysts are a strong buy right now. On average, analysts expect publishing stocks to rise by 27.4% over the next year.

0% of publishing stocks have a Zen Rating of A (Strong Buy), 57.14% of publishing stocks are rated B (Buy), 42.86% are rated C (Hold), 0% are rated D (Sell), and 0% are rated F (Strong Sell).

What is the average p/e ratio of the publishing industry?

The average P/E ratio of the publishing industry is 25.46x.
WallStreetZen does not provide financial advice and does not issue recommendations or offers to buy stock or sell any security.

Information is provided 'as-is' and solely for informational purposes and is not advice. WallStreetZen does not bear any responsibility for any losses or damage that may occur as a result of reliance on this data.