• Get involved.
    We want your input!
    Apply for Membership and join the conversations about everything related to broadcasting.

    After we receive your registration, a moderator will review it. After your registration is approved, you will be permitted to post.
    If you use a disposable or false email address, your registration will be rejected.

    After your membership is approved, please take a minute to tell us a little bit about yourself.
    https://www.radiodiscussions.com/forums/introduce-yourself.1088/

    Thanks in advance and have fun!
    RadioDiscussions Administrators

Audacy Stock today

A little over 15 cents a share. De-listing of the stock should be very soon. What a travesty. Buddy, are you ready to pounce?

We will know more next Wednesday:

 
the NYSE sent them a delisting letter a long time ago, why AUD has not been removed is beyond me

The last time it happened the Fields family pumped the price up by buying stock (from each other?) to get it up, this time around no amount of money is going to keep it from being a "penny stock"

Waiting for the bankruptcy filing.....


Beasley is managing to hover just above $1.00/share
 
The Field family owns way too much stock to allow that to happen.
At some point, the family may have little choice. Market forces will dictate. Audacy now is in penny stock range and a laughingstock ... as is Field the junior, who will no doubt walk away from any possible bankruptcy with little personal loss aided by a platinum parachute, much as Farid Suleman walked from the Citadel bankruptcy. Privatize the profit, socialize the loss.
 
At some point, the family may have little choice. Market forces will dictate.

The family owns 18% of the stock. David himself owns more stock than any one creditor. He's in the hole for millions of his own money. Bankruptcy hurts him and his father. So that's not going to happen. Bankruptcy doesn't happen because the stock price drops to pennies. Sirius went down to 2 cents before John Malone came in to buy the company. As I said in the previous thread on this subject, that's what I expect to happen. The easy way to fix the stock price is a reverse split. We will all know for sure next Wednesday.
 
Just think, you could own 8 shares of a bad stock instead of one. Getting the stock price up doesn't resolve the underlying fundamentals.
 
The family owns 18% of the stock. David himself owns more stock than any one creditor. He's in the hole for millions of his own money. Bankruptcy hurts him and his father. So that's not going to happen. Bankruptcy doesn't happen because the stock price drops to pennies. Sirius went down to 2 cents before John Malone came in to buy the company. As I said in the previous thread on this subject, that's what I expect to happen. The easy way to fix the stock price is a reverse split. We will all know for sure next Wednesday.
Thankfully, I don't have a dog in this fight, and beyond being an observer of radio and business fundamentals, don't much care. This properly noted, that David Filed ("DF") owns more stock than any one creditor may be of less significance when compared to the many creditors, the total number of which exceeds DF's 18% holding. The market cap is nearly 22.5 million shares, so DF holds approximately 4 million shares. Yes, the cost/damage to DF and the Field family holdings in the company affects DF and the Field family, and it could be that a 'white knight' steps up as Malone did with Sirius, but these are different times and circumstances for OTA media. And as Malone did with Sirius, "control" of Audacy will be a major factor for the white knight who makes an attempt to rescue it.

SirRoxalot makes a valid point about fundamentals as it applies to the question; is "eight shares" of a foundering company an enticement to buy ... and hold?
 
When Norm Pattiz owned Westwood One and the stock was around 29 cents a share, they did a 10 for 1 reverse split that made the stock $2.90 a share. Within less than 2 weeks it was back down to 21 cents a share. You can't pour perfume on a pig or fix stupid.
 
And as Malone did with Sirius, "control" of Audacy will be a major factor for the white knight who makes an attempt to rescue it.

Absolutely, and I think the Field family will lose control of Audacy. The only question is to whom?

When Norm Pattiz owned Westwood One and the stock was around 29 cents a share, they did a 10 for 1 reverse split

The ultimate solution was that Mel Karmazin & Infinity bought out Norm's share, and they took over management. My view is that something like that will happen with Audacy.
 
Sirius went down to 2 cents before John Malone came in to buy the company. As I said in the previous thread on this subject, that's what I expect to happen. The easy way to fix the stock price is a reverse split. We will all know for sure next Wednesday.
In one of my more memorable trades, I did purchase a bunch of SIRI shares when the pps was 15 cents. Unfortunately I sold at 1.28
 
When Norm Pattiz owned Westwood One and the stock was around 29 cents a share, they did a 10 for 1 reverse split that made the stock $2.90 a share. Within less than 2 weeks it was back down to 21 cents a share. You can't pour perfume on a pig or fix stupid.
Reverse splits often doom a stock that is mostly doomed already anyway. It is a horrible indicator.
 
What saved GE is spinning off different divisions as entities unto themselves.

All it takes is one activist investor to buy up enough shares to put the Field family under pressure. They could be out in a NY minute if enough of the note-holders and institutional investors decide it's time to write Audacy off and take whatever they can get for their shares or if they call in their notes. The latter would be hard to do if David hasn't defaulted on any payments. If that happens, it will be the end of the Field family control. Avoiding missing a payment may be why there's a fire sale on towers, AM land holdings, and at least a couple of FMs that might be attractive to other groups trying to consolidate holdings in some markets where Audacy doesn't have a full load of FMs.
 
Avoiding missing a payment may be why there's a fire sale on towers, AM land holdings, and at least a couple of FMs

i see that as short term stuff that won't affect stock price. They need to find a new revenue source or a white knight. If Field has a big investor who will keep him as CEO, that will buy him a few years. Otherwise the change may happen next week. They can't grow as a company when they have to watch their spending. They can't attract new investors if they're not growing. A downward spiral is not a way to attract new investors.
 
Status
This thread has been closed due to inactivity. You can create a new thread to discuss this topic.


Back
Top Bottom