By Simon Zekaria, Tapan Panchal and Deborah Ball 

LONDON-- Pearson PLC on Wednesday sold its 50% noncontrolling stake in the publisher of the Economist magazine to the unit's existing shareholders for GBP469 million ($731 million) in cash, as the U.K. firm unloaded another trophy publishing asset to focus on education.

Exor SpA, the investment vehicle of Italy's Agnelli family that founded automobile group Fiat SpA, is paying GBP287 million for around half of Pearson's stake, taking its own shareholding in the Economist Group to more than 43% from less than 5%.

The Economist Group is repurchasing the rest of Pearson's shareholding for GBP182 million. Other shareholders in the unit include the Cadbury and Rothschild families, as well as existing and former staff.

As well as owning the Economist magazine, a weekly business and international news publication, the publisher owns data firm the Economist Intelligence Unit and U.S. politics data group CQ Roll Call.

The disposal swiftly follows Pearson's recent sale of the FT Group, which includes the Financial Times newspaper, to Nikkei Inc. of Japan for GBP844 million.

Wednesday, Pearson shares fell, in line with the overall market.

Following a sale of the Economist, Pearson's only remaining flagship media interest is its 47% stake of book publisher Penguin Random House.

"Almost 20 years ago Pearson embarked on a strategy to transform into a digital education company. It was only a matter of time," said Bernstein Securities analyst Claudio Aspesi, who added the prices offered for the Economist and FT were too good to refuse.

Exor is run by John Elkann, an Agnelli family scion, who serves as the vehicle's chairman and chief executive. It already holds less than 5% of the Economist Group and, among other business interests, controls Fiat Chrysler Automobiles NV.

The move to become the Economist's largest shareholder reflects both Mr. Elkann's keen personal interest in media and his push to further diversify Exor's holdings. Last spring, Exor sold its interest in real estate group Cushman & Wakefield for $1.3 billion, pocketing a gain of $722 million. It then launched into a drawn-own battle to buy reinsurance group PartnerRe Ltd., winning control of the company last week.

But Mr. Elkann, the grandson of Gianni Agnelli, has a particular interest in media. He sits on the board of News Corp, which owns The Wall Street Journal. Moreover, Fiat has long owned Turin-based daily La Stampa and the car maker also has an important stake in the holding company that controls Corriere della Sera, Italy's largest general-interest daily newspaper. Mr. Elkann is heavily involved in the strategies of both companies to respond to the downturn in the Italian media sector. Over the years, Exor has held stakes in other publishing groups, such as Random House and Le Monde.

In a statement, Exor pledged to respect the independence of The Economist. The group's bylaws will be amended to limit the voting powers of any single shareholder to just 20% and to ensure that no individual or company can own more than 50% of the group's shares.

The Economist Group posted an operating profit of GBP60 million in the fiscal year ended March 31, up 2% year-over-year. However, its revenue has fallen to GBP328 million this year from GBP362 million in 2012 amid the broader industry's battle against sliding print advertising income. It contributed GBP21 million to Pearson's operating profit last year.

In 1957, along with its purchase of the FT, Pearson acquired the Economist magazine, which is historically called a "newspaper" and has been edited continuously from London since it was founded in 1843.

The Economist magazine has seen its circulation rise steadily over the past decade to 1.6 million, boosted by online operations as readers gravitate to the Internet from traditional print. Unique visitors to Economist.com increased 32% year-on-year to an average of 11 million a month. Its long-standing editor, John Micklethwait, departed in January after steering the magazine through the financial crash and "digital storm," the group's chairman has said.

Pearson expects the deal to close in the fourth quarter--subject to approval by both a 75% majority of both the Economist Group's shareholders and trustees--and to use the proceeds to invest in its global education strategy, such as providing textbooks, digital learning programs and English language schools.

It has faced calls for years to jettison its publishing interests.

Pearson--which once was a sprawling conglomerate that included the U.K.'s Madame Tussauds wax museums and a stake in a television production company--makes most of its revenue from educational services underpinned by its operations in the U.S. Í

It has restructured its operations and booked hundreds of millions of dollars in cost savings to counter a slowdown in mature educational markets and boost its push into developing economies such as Brazil and China where there is greater demand for learning services.

Write to Simon Zekaria at simon.zekaria@wsj.com, Tapan Panchal at Tapan.Panchal@wsj.com and Deborah Ball at deborah.ball@wsj.com

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