Thoughts and observations on the radio/TV station and wireless tower trading markets. A look at the impact and integration of new media into station operations. Station values, stations for sale, radio and TV station news, towers, and more from a Director of Media Services Group and co-publisher of Inside Towers.
Saturday, August 31, 2013
Georgia Association of Broadcasters GABBY Honors Night Highlight Reel
The Georgia Association of Broadcasters put together a great video from their GABBY Honors night, including the Annual GABBY Awards for Broadcast Excellence. Honors night took place June 7, 2013 at Georgia Public Broadcasting Headquarters in Atlanta. Click HERE for the video.
George
Media Services Group
Tuesday, August 27, 2013
When You’re Hot, You’re Hot!
The television station trading market is on fire. It is a great time to be a buyer…or a seller. Supply and demand are at work and all the stars are aligning to make this the perfect opportunity to own a TV station. TV station consolidation is being driven by the need for scale, increasing retrans revenue, the looming spectrum auction, and low interest rates (or at least, easier borrowing).
If you listen carefully, you’ll hear whispering about the similarity of the current TV market to the radio business boom in the mid-90s. In TV, scale matters and it seems everyone has arrived at that conclusion at the same time. No one is sitting still. Being big is a big deal.
From an M&A perspective, buyers will pay for scale. And it is an impressive list of buyers: Tribune, Gannett, Sinclair, and Gannett to name a few. Peter Liguori (chief executive of Tribune) was quoted as saying, “Our investment thesis is simple: Scale matters.”
Scale is more relevant than either the network affiliation or geography. The “scale argument” is very valid with the bigger revenue and expense numbers in the larger markets. When operators have sufficient scale, they have leverage with their vendors across the spectrum. Plus the scale brings with it more resources to develop top line revenue, more expense savings through consolidation, and generally, a lower cost of capital.
Most of the action happening in the TV business right now is in the top 50 DMAs, with the spectrum auction players focused on the top 35 (and primarily on second tier properties). The Spectrum Auction has created an artificial floor to TV station values. On September 28, 2012, the FCC adopted the Broadcast Television Spectrum Incentive Auction NPRM. In order for wireless networks to keep pace with the demand for spectrum, the FCC proposed to free up the some of the TV spectrum via an auction.
They will be clearing and reallocating parts of the television spectrum. Owners of TV stations will have the option to voluntarily auction off their spectrum to the wireless industry. A number of well-heeled spectators are betting on buying “today” and playing the auction “tomorrow.” The rising tide from the auction is lifting all of the boats. It, in effect, gives owners a “put” (and therefore downside protection) on prices.
TV may be
following the radio consolidation path of the ‘90s, but likely with a better
outcome. TV is more easily scalable than radio. It is a more
transactional type of business model. Radio has to be very concerned 24/7
with local programming (versus the network TV model). There are far fewer
TV stations than radio, so governance is easier. TV may wind up looking
more like the cable business, in terms of ownership/scale, than radio.
Multiples have moved higher for TV. Banks are growing more comfortable with leverage on broadcasters’ balance sheets. I believe that the currently trading multiple is in the range of 8x to 10x.
The icing on the cake may come from badly needed regulatory relief:
Multiples have moved higher for TV. Banks are growing more comfortable with leverage on broadcasters’ balance sheets. I believe that the currently trading multiple is in the range of 8x to 10x.
The icing on the cake may come from badly needed regulatory relief:
- More favorable cross-ownership rules
- Possible relaxation on foreign investment requirements
There have
been nearly $7 billion in TV station M&A so far this year and there’s
approximately another $2 billion more projected to come before the end of the year.* This market is hotter than it ever has been. Now is a great time to buy. Or
sell.
*Source:
UBS Investment Research
Interested in the tower business?
A number of our readers own towers or are otherwise involved in the tower industry. If you fit that description, you might enjoy our sister publication, Inside Towers. Please click to check it out:
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George
Media Services Group
Inside Towers
Link to Inside Towers LinkedIn group
Link to Inside Towers on Twitter
George
Media Services Group
Friday, August 23, 2013
Join us at the Radio Show in Orlando!
The Radio Show is just around the corner, September 18 - 20, to be exact. Media Services Group will have a suite at the Rosen Shingle Creek Hotel and will co-sponsor the Leadership Breakfast on Thursday morning (presented by Lew Paper of Pillsbury). It should be a great convention.
If you would like to schedule a confidential meeting during the show, please get in touch.
Hoping to see you in Orlando,
George
Media Services Group
If you would like to schedule a confidential meeting during the show, please get in touch.
Hoping to see you in Orlando,
George
Media Services Group
Thursday, August 22, 2013
New York Times article on WBAI
Good article on the plight of WBAI, New York. Thanks for the "ink!"
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/08/21/business/media/democracy-may-prove-the-doom-of-wbai.html?smid=tw-share
George
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