Trinity, which has been battling falling circulation and lower advertising rates at its Daily and Sunday Mirror titles, said on Monday it would pay a final dividend of 3 pence per share and planned to increase that to 5 pence in 2015.

Trinity said trading had remained tough, however, with cuts to advertising budgets by the country's biggest supermarkets pushing its print ad revenue down by 14.1 percent in the second half, compared with a decline of 8.8 percent in the first half.

Digital revenue by contrast grew by almost 50 percent, helped by the higher rates charged for online video ads, but at only 6 percent of total publishing revenue, the fall in print sales had a greater impact.

Trinity, whose titles also include the Daily Record, the People and regional titles such as the Liverpool Echo and the Manchester Evening News, said tight cost control had helped to grow adjusted profit before tax by 1 percent to 102.3 million pounds, on revenue that fell 4.1 percent, compared with a 2013 decline of 6 percent.

Chief Executive Simon Fox told reporters the group had witnessed falling advertising spend from supermarkets for around four months and it was difficult to say when it would rebound.

"We are hopeful that we will see that bounce back, but for the moment, while they remain very significant advertisers, they're spending less than they were," he said.

With print advertising remaining volatile, Fox said the group would continue to manage its cost base in line with falling revenue. He said he would at least expect print revenue to grow in the second half of 2015, against the weak comparable.

Trinity foresaw its 2015 performance in line with expectations, with analysts anticipating a continued deterioration in revenue but a slight pickup in pretax profit.

Shares in the group were up 1.4 percent in early trades, valuing it at 527 million pounds and adding to the 26 percent increase it has recorded since the beginning of this year.

(Editing by Paul Sandle)

By Kate Holton