Friday, August 27, 2010

Who says radio isn't fun any more?


Who says radio isn't fun an more? Here is WDHA (Morristown, NJ) market manager Nancy McKinley.

Rumor has it that an NTR Revenu line item has been added to her 2011 budget: Crop Dusting

George
Media Services Group

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

More news-talkers moving to FM

Last week's announcement that heritage, big signal, Atlanta News-Talker WSB-AM (750 kHz) was adding an FM simulcast is yet another benchmark in the growing trend of talkers migrating to the FM band. It follows similar moves by KSL in Salt Lake City and KCBS in San Francisco. While these appear to be smart moves, I believe that they sound a large warning signal for AM station values in the future.

A strong case could be made that the big AM News-Talkers like WSB have kept the AM band alive. News-Talk listeners have been content to seek out their programming on the AM band. If all of the major AMs throw in the towel for the FM band, who will be listening to AM? My guess is that AM will be dominated by niche players in the future: foreign language, religious, and other specialty programming.

Station prices are based on supply and demand. It looks like AM supply will be increasing at the same time that demand is decreasing.

Those are my thoughts. What are yours?

George
Media Services Group

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

Inc. magazine's business plan presentation

If you are working on a business plan (hopefully for station acquisitions!), Inc. magazine has a good resource: Business Plan Presentation. It is a basic PowerPoint template which may serve you well as a starting point for your presentation. At worst, it would serve as an antidote for writer's block.

George
Media Services Group

Monday, August 23, 2010

Have your tried mind mapping? (Article from Inc. magazine)

Here is a good article from Inc. magazine on mind mapping. I have found the concept to be very useful for project management; there are a lot of ways for entrepreneurs to put it to effective use.

I use software from Mindjet (MindManager) and can recommend it highly. For project management, ResultsManager is a great add-in.

George
Media Services Group

Friday, August 20, 2010

MSG transactions for the first six months of 2010

The bad news is that is was a very slow first half of station trading. The good news is 1) it was a lot more active than a year ago, and 2) things are shaping up nicely for the second half. Here are the transactions announced by Media Services Group for the first six months (Note: we used BIA estimates of revenue):

Sale Announced: 01/10
Calls: WMNE-AM (now WHTY-AM)
Buyer: Travis Media
Seller: Radio Disney
Market: West Palm Beach-Boca Raton
Market Rank: 47
Price: $500,000
Gross Revenue (BIA): $150,000

Sale Announced: 3/10
Calls: FM CP
Buyer: Chadrad Communications Inc.
Seller: Big Cat Broadcasting, LLC
Market Rank: Unrated
Price: $85,000
Gross Revenue (BIA): N/A

Sale Announced: 2/10
Calls: KCUV-FM, KJAC-FM
Buyer: Moreland Properties, LLC
Seller: NCR Broadcasting Inc.
Market: Denver-Boulder
Market Rank: 20
Price: $5,000,000
Gross Revenue(BIA) : $800,000

Sale Announced: 3/10
Calls: KDJQ-AM
Buyer: Iglesia Misionera Pentecotes, Inc.
Seller: KDJQ, LLC
Market: Boise, ID
Market Rank: 100
Price: $325,000
Gross Revenue (BIA): N/A

Sale Announced: 4/10
Calls: WCKZ-FM, FMW204BF
Buyer: Star Educational Media Network
Seller: Northeast Indiana Public Radio
Market: Orland, IN
Market Rank: Unrated
Price: $225,000
Gross Revenue (BIA) : N/A

Sale Announced: 5/10
Calls: AM CP
Buyer: Acme Broadcasting III
Seller: Pamplin Broadcasting Inc.
Market: Reno, NV
Market Rank: 121
Price: $20,000
Gross Revenue: N/A


Sale Announced: 7/10
Calls: WHPI-FM, WPIA-FM, WZPN-FM, WWCT-FM
Buyer: Big Toe Communications, LLC
Seller: Independence Media Holding, LLC
Market: Peoria
Market Rank: 150
Price: TBA
Gross Revenue: $1,350,000

George
Media Services Group

Thursday, August 19, 2010

A number of broadcasters support the AM/FM Subcaps

A number of broadcasters teamed up to file reply comments with the FCC seeking repeal of the AM/FM subcaps on July 26. The coalition represents some 668 stations in markets of all sizes. My two broadcasting companies (Monticello Media and MSG Radio) as well as our brokerage firm signed onto the comments.

If the subcaps are repealed, it will result in new capital coming into our capital starved industry. I predict that a number of broadcasting companies may be saved from bankruptcy if the subcaps are removed on a timely basis.

The subcaps are no longer (if ever) justified. You can read the details in the Reply Comments. Essentially, if you operate in a market where ownership of four FMs and two AMs is allowed (or four AMs and two FMs), the removal of the subcaps would allow you to own six stations, regardless of flavor. If they are repealed, unprofitable clusters can swap/trade/buy/sell and improve their strategic and financial positions.

Repealing the subcaps will awaken a stagnant industry, introduce fresh capital, and open doors for new minority ownership. Let's hope that the FCC sees the wisdom of eliminating an antiquated burden on broadcasters.

Click here for the filing: Reply Comments

That is my opinion. What is yours?

George
Media Services Group

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

Syd Small of Acccess.1 passed away last weekend

Our condolences go out to the family, friends, and colleagues of Syd Small, who passed away last weekend. Syd was President and CEO at Access.1, where he ran radio stations and networks. He may be best known for operating WWRL in New York, which he ran for almost 30 years.

Here is the story from NYDailyNews.com.

Syd was a good guy. He will be missed.

George

Radio industry second quarter revenue results

Here is a look at second quarter revenue from around the radio industry:

FMQB

George
Media Services Group

Dave Martin's post on "Eating your own dog food" (station website)

David Martin has a good post about station websites on his N=1 blog. Click on:

"Eating your own dog food"

George
Media Services Group

Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Time to set appointments for the Radio Show in Washington

The Radio Show comes to Washington, DC, September 29 through October 1. This year's show is a joint undertaking between the NAB and RAB. Media Services Group will be located at the headquarters hotel, the Grand Hyatt Washington.

If you would like to set up an appointment to meet, please drop me a line at:

mailto:george@mediaservicesgroup.com

I hope to see you in DC!

George
Media Services Group

Monday, July 12, 2010

Radio stations for sale with seller financing

Station trading activity continued to be slow in the first half of 2010, though vastly ahead of last year’s anemic pace. The lack of bank debt continues to stifle transactions, though there are some seller financed opportunities popping up.

We have three such opportunities, any one of which might fit a first time buyer profile. Cash down payment requirements vary, beginning around $250,000 for a qualified buyer. The stations are located in NC, VA, and WV. Two of the opportunities are in rated markets. Contact me if you would like to look more closely.

We also have a two-FM cluster with some cash flow in a rated Midwest market.

If you belong to LinkedIn and haven’t already joined our group “Radio/TV Station Buyers,” you can click here to do so: Radio/TV Station Buyers

George
Media Servces Group

Thursday, June 24, 2010

RAB and NAB Looking to Cancel Dickstein Shapiro Conference at Radio Show: BIG MISTAKE!

The Dickstein Shapiro conference has been a fixture for those of us in the business of buying, selling, and financing radio stations for something like twenty years, most of that time as the lead-off event at the Radio Show. It is the only event of the year where all 400 industry participants are in the same room at the same time.

The NAB wants to cancel it this year and fold the sessions into the regular show format. I am told that the RAB's Jeff Haley is leading the charge. Big mistake.

For many, the conference is the one NAB event that is relevant. A number of the participants fly in specifically for the event in the morning, take a few meetings in the afternoon, then fly home. The NAB will lose them as Radio Show attendees if the current plans hold.

A number of brokers are so incensed about the NAB's actions that they are considering running their own conference down the street from the NAB's (and would probably invite Dickstein's Lew Paper to run it as he has for the last two decades). At a time when the NAB and RAB are working hard to maintain the Radio Show's relevance, how can they get this one so wrong? If you agree, make your thoughts known to Jeff Haley and your NAB contact.

Those are my thoughts. What are yours?

George
Media Services Group

Friday, April 16, 2010

Observations from this year's NAB Show

Following a day of recovery time, I would like to share some observations from this year's NAB in Las Vegas. Many of us switched venues this year. Brokers and bankers were torn between the familiar Bellagio and the new (and NAB endorsed) Encore. Most (including Media Services Group) opted for the Encore. It turned out to be a great spot . . . good restaurants, pleasant surroundings, and generally good service. Our suite was in the Tower Suites and it proved to be a comfortable meeting locale. I heard several comments that the "bump factor" (running into colleagues in the lobby, bar, and hallways) was not as good as previously at the Bellagio.

On a side note, the Encore is hosting Garth Brooks in its showroom. Loree and I saw his show Sunday night and it was fabulous. He does over two hours just with an acoustic guitar. No band. No fire, smoke or flashing lights. If you get a chance, see the show.

The official NAB attendance numbers were up over last year and our experience bore that out. Unlike last year when there were few bankers, buyers or sellers in our suite, this year consisted of wall to wall meetings. I think that is a good leading indicator of the health of the station trading business. The difference between this year and last was striking.

The same can be said about attitudes. A year ago, most of us had the feeling of staring into the abyss. Fast forward twelve months and you get the sense of a new optimism about the broadcasting industry (though fear abounds about the economy). There is a strong sense that the "bottom" is in the rear view mirror. I concur. In fact, I think that the New York Times sale of WQXR last year was the bottom. Things have steadily improved since.

As for station pricing, my partners and I went into the convention with the sense that buyers were offering up 6x BCF and sellers were asking 8x (with some deals likely to get done in the sevens). Our meetings with prospective buyers and sellers supported our thesis. I believe that 6x to 8x range to be an accurate assessment of today's trading market.

Inventory is still tight. I know that ours is and conversations with other brokers and buyers suggest that we are not alone. We expect a far greater supply of inventory by the fall Radio Show.

I also found it noteworthy that we had some bankers in our suite (and they were not all there to talk about workouts). Some lenders appear to actually be gearing up to make media loans again. That too is significant.

There was a lot of chatter (and a few conspiracy theories) about the $500 million equity investment with Lew Dickey. As I mentioned before, we view it as a sea-change event for the industry.

As always, regulatory matters were front and center in Las Vegas. One conversation raised an interesting point regarding the FCC's attempted TV spectrum grab. If the current FCC commissioners think that broadcasting is no longer relevant (as seems to be the case), how can they then take the position that multiple ownership rules make any sense? We're either relevant or we're not. They can't have it both ways.

The NAB Show proved that the deal market is back, at least compared to last year. There is much healing still required. And things won't materially improve until the lenders re-enter the marketplace. But finally, we appear to be moving in the right direction.

That's how I saw the convention. What about you?

George
Media Services Group

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

The bottom is in

The Crestview Partners $500 million investment in Lew Dickey announced today marks the turnaround for the radio industry. With leverage, it represents new liquidity for the radio business in excess of $1 Billion. I believe that we saw the real pricing bottom mid-year 2009 with the purchase and sale of WQXR in New York.

This deal brings renewed life to station trading. We have weathered the storm. Congratulations Lew!

George
Media Services Group

Saturday, April 3, 2010

iPad sales in 2010 are predicted to top 7.1 million units. 2011, 14.4 million. 2012, 20.1 million. Article

Fellow radio broadcasters: don't you wish the iPad included an FM tuner, especially one capable of receiving HD? How did we miss this?

George
Media Services Group

Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Stations for sale: new opportunities

Media Services Group is exclusively marketing some new radio and TV station opportunities:

• 4 station cluster (2 AM / 2 FM) in a Mid-Atlantic college market. $700k revenue
• 4 FM station cluster in rated Southeastern market. Turnaround priced to sell. Seller financing.
• Small market ABC affiliate TV station
• 4 FM station cluster in rated North Carolina market. Seller financing.
• AM/FM in North Carolina resort market. Seller financing.
• 2 FMs in Southwest rated market.
• 2 FMs in Midwest rated market. Positive cash flow.

If you are interested, please contact me for an NDA (George@MediaServicesGroup.com).

George
Media Services Group

Let's get together at the NAB

The NAB is just around the corner. The Media Services Group suite will be at the Encore this year. If you would like to discuss the station and tower trading marketplace, please get in touch for an appointment. We are available Sunday night through Tuesday.

I hope to see you there!

George
Media Services Group

Monday, March 22, 2010

Good FCC information website for broadcasters

Here is a website from Cavell Mertz & Associates which makes researching FCC station information a breeze (for AM/FM/TV). You can also search Antenna Structure Registration and nearby airports. Very handy. And thanks to Don Curtis for the tip. Click here: FCCInfo.com

George
Media Services Group

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

Are Broadcasters About to Spend Another 24 Months in a Flaming PR Dungeon?

When XM and Sirius hit the marketplace, the companies’ PR machines (and their Wall Street supporting cast) waged war on traditional broadcasters. And for the most part, they won, at least until the truth overcame the hype.

We spent a couple of years reading and hearing about the destruction of free over-the-air broadcasting. Satellite radio was Radio’s Death Star. It would own car radios. Broadcasting was obsolete.

Guess what. XM and Sirius merged and morphed into the niche business it was always destined to become.

Here we go again. Pandora will likely go public in the near future. The hype, much like that with satellite radio, will become deafening as the Wall Street banks line up to rake in big fees from the IPO and run-up of the stock.

Are broadcasters going to again sit idly by and suffer another two years in the PR dungeon?
Pandora is a cool application. It probably has “legs” in the marketplace. But it is another niche product. It cannot beat “local.” It will not beat us at what we do best.

Broadcasters need to unite to tell their story of free, over-the-air radio. We do not need to spend the next two years listening to “Pandora’s Radio Death Star” story. We have incredible reach in every community in the country. Pandora does not now, and I predict, will not ever have it. Let’s tell the world what Pandora really is… a “cool” niche product.

Those are my thoughts. What are yours?

George
Media Services Group

Monday, March 1, 2010

Regent Communications Announces Consensual Restructuring Agreement With Senior Lenders





Regent announced a restructuring this morning which includes a prearranged Chapter 11 filing. Oaktree Capital Management L.P. will assume control. If that name sounds familiar, Oaktree backs the GAP companies and Triton Digital. The press release is HERE.




Monday, February 22, 2010

The Spring Thaw Has Started Early


The frozen station trading market is starting to thaw. Media Services Group has actually announced some sales and some closings in recent weeks (including Jody McCoy's Denver sale) after months of dormancy. With our size and scope, we're a good barometer for the state of the marketplace. And pressure is rising.

The credit markets remain a problem, but I take Salem's recent debt placement and Clear Channel's recent upgrade as positive steps. Some sellers in the small markets are now considering seller financed transactions.

Reports from the station operators around the country are generally upbeat about QI business (albeit against easy comps). It appears that national business has turned the corner. The spring thaw has begun a little early this year.

George
Media Services Group

Wednesday, February 3, 2010

See you in a week

Loree and I are leaving today for a week long visit to Cuba. This is our second trip. We are traveling (legally!) on behalf of Methodists United in Prayer, a relationship between the Florida and Cuba Methodist Churches.

As we will not have access to the web, cell phones, or email, these pages will be silent for a week. We'll chat again after we return on February 11.

George
Media Services Group

Meet the Media Services Group partners: Greg Merrill


This post completes my series of highlights of my partners at Media Services Group. We are proud of the twenty years of service to the broadcast industry. We wrap up with another of our co-founders, Greg Merrill.


Greg anchors our Salt Lake City office from Logan, Utah. Over 26 years as a broker/consultant, and with a thorough knowledge of the broadcasting industry, he as prepared hundreds of appraisals and station analyses. In addition, he has 13 years of owner/operator experience.


Greg has served as a Court Appointed Receiver for District Court Boise (KDJQ-AM) and has been involved in Bankruptcy cases and/or served as expert witness in:


•Boise, Idaho Federal Bankruptcy Court
•Salt Lake City Federal Bankruptcy Court
•Expert witness in Phoenix, Arizona; Eugene Oregon; Seattle, Washington; and Bakersfield, California

Greg has sold over 150 stations in Utah, Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, Nevada, Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico, Washington, Oregon and California. He holds a B.S. Business Administration degree and a Master’s Degree in Communications from Utah State University.
I am honored to work with this group of professionals. Collectively, we bring hundreds of years of service to broadcasters, lenders and investors. All of my partners put integrity first. Maybe that's why we're still around and successful after twenty years.
George

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Meet the Media Services Group partners: Providence office

Our Providence office is staffed by veterans Bob Maccini, Stephan Sloan, and Ted Clark (with Diana Todd really running things). In addition to an active station brokerage practice, our Providence office anchors our broadcast valuation practice, which in my humble opinion, is the best in the industry.

Bob Maccini commenced his broadcasting involvement at Old Stone Bank, Providence, RI where he managed the bank's Communications Lending Group for five years. Subsequently, he founded and managed Chapman Financial Services, a subsidiary of Chapman Associates which provided investment banking services to the broadcasting industry.

Bob was one of our co-founders when Media Services Group was launched twenty years ago. Since, he has worked with numerous financial institutions in broadcasting related workout transactions and has been appointed as a receiver and examiner by various courts to oversee and sell radio and cable television companies.

Bob serves on the Boards of Saga Communications and GAP Broadcasting, and is President/CEO of Ando Media. He holds a B.A. degree in Economics from Holy Cross College and an M.B.A. degree in Finance from Babson College.

Stephan Sloan assists clients in a variety of investment banking, brokerage, appraisal, portfolio management, and expert testimony tasks. Stephan has helped clients obtain more than $40 million in senior debt and helped broker radio stations with an aggregate value of more than $200 million. He has appraised or assisted in the appraisal of radio, television, and cable television systems valued in excess of $500 million for clients that include the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) and the Resolution Trust Corporation (RTC).

Working closely with Bob in Media Services' Broadcast Portfolio Group, Stephan has helped financial institutions with problems in their broadcast and cable loan portfolios and in court-appointed receivership assignments. He has also been accepted in state court as an expert witness on radio station valuation, finance, and receivership matters. Steph attended Salve Regina University.

Ted Clark is an analyst in Providence. He joined the firm in 1997 and since that time has performed valuations of radio, television and cable television systems totaling in excess of $560 million. Prior to joining Media Services Group, Ted (or as we call him, "Dr. Clark") worked as a research scientist and software developer in the biotechnology industry. He received his B.S. degree from the University of Rhode Island and performed his graduate studies at Dartmouth College.

George
Media Services Group