The Forbes family, which founded the magazine 97 years ago, is retaining a "significant" interest in the company and remains an active part of management, Forbes Media said in a statement.
Steve Forbes will continue to serve as chairman and editor-in-chief.
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Forbes Media said it will retain its name and will remain a privately held, independent company headquartered in the United States. Chief Executive Mike Perlis will continue to lead the company's management team. Forbes' Asian business will continue to be directed from Singapore under Forbes Media CEO of Asia Will Adamopoulos.
"Our partners respect our brand and values, and support our long-standing mission of championing entrepreneurship and free market capitalism through quality, independent business journalism," Steve Forbes said in a statement.
"The best evidence of their commitment to what we stand for is their insistence on the continued involvement of the Forbes family, the current management and our highly talented editorial team. I will remain deeply involved in the future of the company."
The deal means that Elevation Partners, the private equity firm that counts U2 singer Bono as one of its founders, has exited the company. In 2006, it made a $264-million investment for 45 per cent stake before a downturn racked the print industry as advertisers directed their budgets to digital.
When Forbes first announced it was going on the auction block in November, a source familiar with the matter at the time said the company was hoping for a sale in the range of $400 million to $500 million.
It is not known whether that goal was reached. A Forbes representative was not immediately available to comment.
Forbes magazine, known for its annual list of the world's wealthiest people and as an unabashed promoter of capitalism, has in recent years been making a big digital push with its website. However, it still must surmount the high hurdles facing magazine publishers everywhere, chiefly declines in readership and advertising revenue.
Last year, Forbes magazine's advertising revenue fell five per cent to about $260 million on a 10 per cent drop in ad pages according to estimates from the Publisher's Information Bureau.
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