The Wall Street Journal Europe

The Wall Street Journal Europe

Type: daily newspaper (M-F)

Format: compact

Circulation: 75,996 (ABC Jan-June 2009)

Readership: 205,189

Reader profile: 79% European citizens; 62% top management; average personal income: U.S.$286,000; average household net worth: U.S.$2.98 million (Wall Street Journal Europe Subscriber Study 2007)

Editor-in-chief: Tracy Corrigan

Publisher: Kelly Leach

Content includes
  • Regular columnists, including ‘Agenda’ on page two with views and analysis from editor-in-chief Tracy Corrigan and well-known economist Irwin Stelzer. Other columns that run throughout the week include ‘Commentariat’ (what the bloggers are saying); ‘Letter From’ (international correspondents offering their unique on-the-ground insights); and 'Think Again' (a regular Monday column offering a second opinion on current thinking on companies and sectors)
  • The Journal Interview: profile pieces with key figures in business, finance and politics. A feature every Monday, but other days of the week too
  • The Big Read: a daily in-depth, investigative or wide-ranging piece designed to give the reader the full story behind the news
  • Business & Finance: analysis and statistics, with an additional explanation of the factors that are causing market movement through regular columns
  • Regionally themed pages, including Europe, U.S. and World News providing a digest of news produced by Dow Jones’ unrivalled resources around the world
  • C-Suite: a section focusing on a different aspect of life beyond the boardroom each week. Topics include Management, Health, Work and Home, Technology and Travel
  • Sport: a daily sports page edited by European sports editor Jonathan Clegg which reports on the business of sport and also includes a daily dose of sporting trivia and a sporting bet of the day
  • The Quirk: a witty take on life and is designed to entertain and amuse
  • World Watch, Business Watch: a double-page spread designed to give readers a brief summary of what happened in the world yesterday. ‘World Watch’ gives political and economic developments, listed by country while ‘Business Watch’ gives corporate and financial developments by sector
  • Heard on the Street: essential reading for financial professionals, corporate decision-makers and retail investors, this global column with a team based in Europe provides readers with a broad mix of agenda-setting analysis and commentary (wsj.com/heardonthestreet)
  • Editorial & Opinion pages: feature incisive commentary by the WSJ’s global editorial team and attract comment from prominent politicians, captains of industry and key influencers from around the world, edited for Europe by Brian Carney
  • Weekend Journal: a weekly arts and lifestyle supplement, published every Friday, featuring stories on art, movies, music, travel, food and wine fine-tuned for a European audience
  • Journal Reports: a series of eight-page special reports providing readers with detailed information and insight on topics and themes of European concern, including ‘Wealth Journal’, a quarterly supplement on private wealth
  • WSJ., the global magazine from The Wall Street Journal, distributed quarterly with the WSJE
  • Content from other Dow Jones publications and services in Europe, including Dow Jones Newswires, a premier provider of real-time business news and information to financial professionals around the world; Financial News, the leading publication for the European securities industry; and Private Equity News, the leading publication in Europe for the buyout community.

Famous quotes containing the words wall, street and/or journal:

    A grimy fly can soil the entire wall and a small, dirty little act can ruin the entire proceedings.
    Anton Pavlovich Chekhov (1860–1904)

    One must always be aware, to notice—even though the cost of noticing is to become responsible.
    Thylias Moss, African American poet. As quoted in the Wall Street Journal (May 12, 1994)

    After the writer’s death, reading his journal is like receiving a long letter.
    Jean Cocteau (1889–1963)