TheMarker, Ha'aretz Daily Newspaper
TheMarker, Ha'aretz Daily Newspaper is a company.
Financial History
Leadership Team
Key people at TheMarker, Ha'aretz Daily Newspaper.
TheMarker, Ha'aretz Daily Newspaper is a company.
Key people at TheMarker, Ha'aretz Daily Newspaper.
TheMarker is a leading Hebrew-language daily business newspaper and digital media brand published by the Haaretz Group in Israel, focusing on financial news, analysis, and business events.[1] It operates as a supplement to Haaretz, Israel's newspaper of record founded in 1918, producing a website, daily print edition, monthly magazine, and events that cover economics, startups, investments, and market trends, employing about 250 staff in Tel Aviv.[1][2][4] TheMarker has shaped Israel's financial media landscape by blending online innovation with print, boosting Haaretz subscriptions by around 15% through its popularity and influential lists like "Israel's 100 most influential people" and "Israel's 500 richest people."[1][5]
TheMarker was founded in 1999 by journalist and entrepreneur Guy Rolnik, in partnership with the Haaretz Group and U.S.-based investors, initially as an online business publication.[1] It quickly gained traction, launching a monthly print magazine called TheMarker Magazine in 2001 and starting business events in 2003; by 2005, Haaretz terminated its own business section to relaunch TheMarker as a full daily print newspaper, a move that won major marketing awards in 2006-2007 for Rolnik and the team.[1] Eytan Avriel, another key founder, serves as editor of the monthly magazine, while current chief editor is Sivan Klingbail.[1][3] This evolution from digital pioneer to print powerhouse humanized business journalism in Israel, reversing Haaretz's economic coverage decline and strengthening reader loyalty.[1]
TheMarker rides the wave of Israel's "Startup Nation" ecosystem, providing critical coverage of tech investments, fintech, cybersecurity, and venture capital amid booming innovation (e.g., tracking unicorn growth and IPOs).[1][6] Its timing capitalized on early 2000s digital media shifts and post-2005 print relaunch aligned with economic liberalization, influencing policy debates and investor sentiment in a nation where tech exports dominate GDP.[1][2] Market forces like digital subscriptions and events favor it, as seen in Haaretz's 70,000+ print circulation and millions in web traffic, while it shapes the ecosystem by spotlighting startups, fostering networks, and holding corporations accountable through investigative pieces.[4][5]
TheMarker remains Israel's go-to for business intelligence, but faces digital disruption from global platforms and ad challenges—expect deeper AI-driven personalization and expanded English tech coverage to sustain growth.[1][6] Trends like remote work, Web3, and regional tech hubs (e.g., UAE ties) will amplify its role, potentially evolving influence via podcasts or data analytics tools. Tying back to its founding as a digital disruptor, TheMarker is poised to redefine financial media in a multipolar tech world, much like its 1999 launch transformed Haaretz.[1]
Key people at TheMarker, Ha'aretz Daily Newspaper.