At the close of trading in New York, News Corp shares were 6% higher.
The move recovers some of the losses sustained as the phone-hacking scandal at its newspaper title, the News of the World, has unfolded.
But pressure on the company continues, with another major shareholder questioning the company's standards.
The giant Californian public pension fund, CalPERS, has joined the list of those who are unhappy with the way the company has been managed.
CalPERS (California Public Employees' Retirement System), which owns 6.4 million of News Corp's shares, is in particular unhappy with the shareholding structure that gives the Murdoch family's 'B' shares voting rights, meaning that although they own 12% of the company, they hold the biggest single block - 40% - of the votes.
Other 'B' shares are largely held by unnamed investors.
Family powerMore than two thirds of the shares are 'A' shares, which give investors no say as to who sits on the board, let alone major strategic decisions such as whether to bid for another company.
Its Senior Portfolio Manager, Anne Simpson, who heads its corporate governance program, said: "News Corp does not have one share one vote. This is a corruption of the governance system.
"Power should reflect capital at risk. CalPERS sees the voting structure in a company as critical. The situation is very serious and we're considering our options. We don't intend to be spectators - we're owners."
Other financially interested parties have this week reviewed their opinion of the strength of the company.
Continue reading the main storyThe Murdochs will probably be seen to have emerged bruised but not broken by today's ordeal - which is why the share price of News Corporation, the parent company, has been stabilised”End Quote
Also on Monday, another of its shareholders urged it to raise its standards.
The Nathan Cummings Foundation in New York, a small shareholder in News Corp, wrote to the board asking it to improve its transparency and governance:
The Foundation is concerned about News Corp's political lobbying, particularly payments to organisations that have then campaigned for looser regulation which could potentially benefit its businesses.
News Corp has reorganised its standards committee, set up to investigate impropriety at News International.
News Corporation is the parent company of News International, which runs the Sun, the Times and Sunday Times. Their sister paper, the News of the World, was shut down earlier this month as a result of the phone-hacking scandal.
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