Graham Holdings
| Formerly | The Washington Post Company (1947–2013) |
|---|---|
| Company type | Public |
| NYSE: GHC (Class B) S&P 400 component | |
| ISIN | US3846371041 |
| Industry | Conglomerate |
| Founded | August 4, 1947 (as The Washington Post Company) Washington, D.C., U.S. |
| Headquarters | , U.S. |
Key people |
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| Products | Magazines Educational Services Television Cable television Electronic media |
| Revenue | US$3.924 Billion (Fiscal Year Ended December 31, 2022) |
| US$83.898 Million (Fiscal Year Ended December 31, 2022) | |
| US$67.08 Million (Fiscal Year Ended December 31, 2022) | |
| Total assets | US$6.582 Billion (Fiscal Year Ended December 31, 2022) |
| Total equity | US$3.752 Billion (Fiscal Year Ended December 31, 2022) |
Number of employees | 11,500 (2015) |
| Website | www |
Graham Holdings Company (formerly The Washington Post Company) is a diversified American conglomerate holding company. Headquartered in Arlington County, Virginia, and incorporated in Delaware, it was formerly the owner of The Washington Post newspaper and Newsweek magazine.
Its current holdings include the digital marketing company Code3 (formerly SocialCode); online and print media entities including Slate Magazine, Foreign Policy through the FP Group, which includes Foreign Policy magazine and ForeignPolicy.com), Graham Media Group (formerly Post-Newsweek Stations), a group of seven television stations; education company Kaplan; manufacturing operations including Hoover Treated Wood Products, Dekko, Joyce/Dayton Corp, Forney Corporation; Graham Healthcare Group, which provides home health, hospice and palliative care services through joint ventures with health systems and physicians groups as well as other services; Graham Automotive, which includes eight automotive dealerships around the Washington, D.C. region; and content and marketplace company World of Good Brands (formerly Leaf Group). Graham Holdings Company also owned cable television and internet service provider Cable One until it was spun off in 2015 and the now-defunct Trove (formerly WaPo Labs)—the developers of a news reader app.