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Gray buying Raycom for $3.6 billion

Does this mean that WSWG will no longer be a semi-satellite of WCTV Thomasville, which will still be owned by Gray?
 
list courtesy ofhttps://seekingalpha.com/news/3384335-gray-sets-divestitures-eight-markets-raycom-deal


Along with last week's agreement to sell CBS affliate WSWG in Albany, Ga., the nine divestitures come at a combined purchase price of $235.5M, ahead of Gray's own projections for the deals.

Lockwood Broadcasting has agreed to purchase Fox affiliates WTNZ in Knoxville, WFXG in Augusta, WPGX in Panama City, and WDFX in Dothan. Tegna (NYSE:TGNA) has agreed to buy CBS affiliate WTOL in Toledo and NBC affiliate KWES in Odessa-Midland, for $105M.

And E.W. Scripps (NYSE:SSP) is buying ABC affiliates KXXV/KRHD in Waco and WTXL in Tallahassee for $55M.
 
list courtesy of https://seekingalpha.com/news/3384335-gray-sets-divestitures-eight-markets-raycom-deal


Along with last week's agreement to sell CBS affliate WSWG in Albany, Ga., the nine divestitures come at a combined purchase price of $235.5M, ahead of Gray's own projections for the deals.

Lockwood Broadcasting has agreed to purchase Fox affiliates WTNZ in Knoxville, WFXG in Augusta, WPGX in Panama City, and WDFX in Dothan. Tegna (NYSE:TGNA) has agreed to buy CBS affiliate WTOL in Toledo and NBC affiliate KWES in Odessa-Midland, for $105M.

And E.W. Scripps (NYSE:SSP) is buying ABC affiliates KXXV/KRHD in Waco and WTXL in Tallahassee for $55M.
Fixed the link so it's clickable :D

Pat
 
https://www.broadcastingcable.com/n...mbo-would-increase-consolidation-considerably

Another take on the Gray/Raycom Talks

The American Cable Association wants to make sure that Gray is not allowed to raise the retrans fees of stations before spinning them off to other buyers in its purchase of Raycom's TV stations.

That is according to an ACA filing at the FCC. In a combination of broadcast groups they are billing as creating "the single largest owner of top-rated local television stations and digital assets in the country," Gray in June struck a deal, subject to FCC approval of course, to buy Raycom for $3.6 billion.

Gray will divest stations in nine markets* to comply with FCC local ownership restrictions rather than try to retain some where it could make a case for it. The FCC is allowing ownership of two of the top four-rated stations in a market on a case-by-case basis. Sinclair tried to keep a couple of stations in its Tribune deal, but that likely contributed to the pushback that deal got at the Justice Department and FCC.



ACA did not ask the FCC to block the deal, but it did point to the size of the combined company and said the FCC would have to weigh the benefits of the deal versus the potential harms of that consolidation.


One of those is the after-acquired clauses in TV station retrans agreements with cable operators. In such agreements, a broadcaster requires that if it buys a station getting lower retrans fees from the cable operator, its higher fees will apply.

ACA wants the FCC to make sure that for the stations that are being spun off to new owners, Gray does not structure the deal so that it briefly owns those stations and trigger the higher fee, which the new owner would then get.

"Longstanding Commission precedent states that Gray does not obtain 'control' of a station for purposes of the Communications Act through an 'essentially instantaneous' transaction," ACA told the commission. "Yet this Commission precedent may not stop a dispute from emerging over whether these after-acquired-station clauses apply."

Or, said ACA, "Gray may take a bolder approach and structure its divestitures to give it ownership and control for longer than such fleeting moment for the purpose of strengthening its case that an after-acquired-station clause was triggered."

"None of that," says ACA: "The Commission should clarify that Gray must not 'acquire' or obtain 'control' of Raycom divestiture stations for all purposes, and specifically prohibit Gray from triggering any after-acquired-station clauses for any acquired stations that it divests voluntarily or by government mandate as part of getting its acquisition of Raycom approved."
 
Does this mean that WSWG will no longer be a semi-satellite of WCTV Thomasville, which will still be owned by Gray?

Looks like it. WCTV is starting another newscast, this time at 4. And it will not be simulcast either. Marquee also bought a TV station in Cordele (within the Albany, GA DMA).
 
Yep, that'd be WSST/ch. 22. Marquee will have three stations in Georgia alone (the third being WGTA/ch. 32 in Toccoa, Atlanta DMA).
 
https://www.broadcastingcable.com/news/ncta-gray-hasnt-made-case-hawaii-duopoly

Here is an update on the Gray/Raycom talks and note Hawaii has been named in the talks due to Raycom's ownership of KGMB and KHNL-TV

Cable operators not looking for a boost in broadcaster retrans leverage, have told the FCC Gray Television has not made a case for being allowed to own two of the top four stations in Honolulu.

Gray is seeking to retain both stations in its deal to buy another high-rated station in the market. Gray in June struck a deal, subject to FCC approval, to buy Raycom for $3.6 billion.

In a broadcast deregulation decision late last year, the FCC loosened its prohibition on owning two of the top four-rated stations in a market, saying it would still presume it was not in the public interest, but that presumption could be rebutted on a case-by-case basis.

Related: ACA to FCC: If Gray-Raycom Goes Through, Retrans Fees Will Go Up

For example, Sinclair attempted to make such a showing before its proposed deal to acquire Tribune stations crumbled.
 
https://tvnewscheck.com/article/top-news/227008/doj-sets-divestitures-gray-raycom-ok/

Here is an Update in the Gray/ Raycom Talks

The Department of Justice announced Friday that it will require Gray Television and Raycom Media, to divest television stations in nine markets as a condition of approving the proposed $3.6 billion merger between Gray and Raycom. The deal still needs FCC approval.

The Justice Department’s Antitrust Division filed a civil antitrust lawsuit in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia to block the proposed merger. At the same time, it filed a proposed settlement that, if approved by the court, would resolve the suit by remedying the competitive harms alleged in the complaint, through the divestitures and related conditions.

“Without the required divestitures, Gray’s merger with Raycom threatens serious competitive harm to cable subscribers and small businesses,” said Assistant Attorney General Makan Delrahim of the Justice Department’s Antitrust Division. “I am pleased, however, that we have been able to reach a speedy and complete resolution of the division’s concerns, thanks in part to the parties’ commitment to engage in good faith settlement talks from the outset of our investigation.”
 
https://tvnewscheck.com/article/top-news/227008/doj-sets-divestitures-gray-raycom-ok/

Update on the Gray Talks

DOJ said the merger would also enable the company to charge local businesses and other advertisers higher prices for spot advertising in the divestiture markets. “Businesses rely on competition among broadcast station owners to obtain reasonable advertising prices. Gray and Raycom compete with one another for the business of local advertisers, and the proposed merger would eliminate that competition, harming local businesses,” it said.

The Antitrust Division said it determined that the divestitures would resolve antitrust concerns related to the licensing of Big 4 television retransmission consent and the sale of broadcast television spot advertising that would otherwise result from the merger. The divestitures required under the settlement announced today would, if approved by the court, require Gray to sell the Big Four affiliate stations currently owned by either Raycom or Gray in each of the nine markets where the companies have Big Four overlaps. The settlement requires that the divestitures be accomplished in such a way as to satisfy the United States that the divested stations and associated assets will be used by the buyers as part of a viable, ongoing commercial television broadcasting business.

The stations involved:

Knoxville

Gray: WVLT (CBS) | Raycom: WTNZ (Fox)

Toledo

ADVERTISEMENT

Gray: WTVG (ABC) | Raycom: WTOL (CBS)

Waco

Gray: KWTX (CBS) | Raycom: KXXV (ABC)

Augusta

Gray: WRDW (CBS) | Raycom: WFXG (Fox)

Tallahassee

Gray: WCTV (CBS) | Raycom: WTXL (ABC)

Odessa-Midland

Gray: KOSA (CBS) | Raycom: KWES (NBC)

Panama City

Gray: WJHG (NBC-CBS) | Raycom: WPGX (Fox)

Albany

Gray: WSWG (CBS) | Raycom: WALB (ABC-NBC)

Dothan

Gray: WTVY (CBS-NBC) | Raycom: WDFX (Fox)
 
https://www.broadcastingcable.com/news/fcc-grants-raycom-hitv-renewals

Here is an issue that may affect the Gray/Raycom deal in Hawaii

The FCC has granted the license renewals of Raycom's KHNL(TV) and KGMB (TV), both Honolulu, Hawaii, and HITV's KFVE (TV) Honolulu, denying a license challenge by Media Council Hawai’i and putting a final nail in the group's long-standing complaint that Raycom and KITV had run afoul of local ownership rules.


The issue had been that Raycom had traded affiliations with HITV's KFVE back in 2009 so that Raycom got the CBS affiliation for KGMB and KFVE became the MyNetWork TV affiliate.

That meant that after that affiliation switch, Raycom owned two of the top-four stations in a market, which violated the FCC duopoly rule prohibition on owning two of the top four stations at the time—it has since been changed to a presumption that such combos are not in the public interest, but it is a rebuttable presumption.


Media Counsel also said that affiliation swap had been "tantamount to an outright purchase." Media Council also said Raycom controlled KFVE as well as via sharing arrangements and should have to divest one of its two owned stations in Honolulu.


The FCC's Media Bureau at the time, in initially denying the complaint, pointed out that the FCC rules did not prevent affiliation switches that resulted in owning two of the top four. The Media Bureau this week pointed out that though that changed in 2016 to counting such affiliation switches, existing ones like that in Hawai'i was grandfathered. Thus, the earlier complaint was mooted by the fact that the rules at the time did not prevent it, and the more recent license challenge was denied in part because the combo was grandfathered and in part because other issues Media Council raised did not rise to the level of misrepresentation of lack of candor.

The FCC this week concluded in resolving Media Council's appeal of that earlier complaint and its newer challenge to the license renewals on the same grounds, that the Media Bureau had been right to deny the complaint in the first place and that there was also no reason to deny the license renewals.
 
https://tvnewscheck.com/article/top-news/227334/fcc-approves-gray-raycom-merger/

Here is an update on the Gray/Raycom talks

The FCC today blessed the Gray Television $3.6 billion acquisition of Raycom Media, clearing the path for the two parties to close the deal by Jan. 1, 2019.

The merger creates another TV mega-group with stations in 92 markets reaching 24% of TV homes (or 17% with the UHF discount the FCC uses in calculating compliance with its 39% ownership cap).




To win approval of the FCC and the Justice Department, Gray said when it announced the deal in June that it would divest stations in nine markets to avoid overlaps of two network affiliates.

Such duopolies would violate the FCC local ownership rules and could run afoul of Justice’s antitrust guidelines.
 
https://www.ftvlive.com/sqsp-test/2018/12/21/pink-slips-to-fly-at-gray

Here is an update on the Gray/Raycom Talks

https://www.ftvlive.com/sqsp-test/2018/12/21/graycom-is-a-go-says-fcc



6 days ago, FTVLive told you that the DOJ has signed off on the Gray and Raycom deal and yesterday the FCC did the same.

That means that the deal will be closed by the end of the year and another consolidation will take place.

People will lose their jobs and the news product will suffer. But, Gray suits will line their pockets with cash

Gray will spin off a number of stations in overlapping markets to either Tegna, Scripps or Lockwood.

As the industry gets smaller as stations are gobbled up into the mega groups, it will be a big blow to Journalism.


Sources tell FTVLive that with Gray Television getting the go ahead to takeover the Raycom stations, the pink slip express is being gassed up and getting a new set of tires.

Word is that Gray wants to drop the body count at the Raycom stations and also is looking to make a number of management changes at those stations.

It looks like 2019 is going to start with a number of people looking for work.

If you are working at a Raycom station here’s some advice, update your resume and keep your head down. We have a feeling it is going to be a rocky road the next few weeks.
 
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