Interesting point, except for the fact that radio revenue (inflation adjusted) is off by 2/3 since 2000. So the objective of every station owner is to survive and try to find a way to preserve a bit of asset value and maybe make some money.
From a business standpoint, buying a company that has incured a lot of debt with your own company which also has a lot of debt *only* makes sense if you believe you have a way to *earn more* from the combined revenues than at least the interest you are paying on that debt. While some may argue economies of scale, I have yet to see that work in practice in any material sense, especially in the radio industry, which makes me suspect that
@Theater of My Mind's arguments on this have a lot more validity than you give him/her credit for. What I think is most likely to happen should this merger actually occur is that jobs and over-the-air stations will disappear faster than they otherwise would if both IHeart and XM had not merged.
Actually, it might improve it a lot. If fewer companies offered audiences to advertisers, it would be easier to buy radio. Advertisers today find radio very labor-heavy to buy, with different companies having the same formats in different markets. Putting a buy together is very much more intricate than buying national media, such as streamed podcasts.
Advertising agencies, like everybody else, should be careful of what they wish for. While it is true that in monopolistic and monopolistic competition (where there are only a few big companies to deal with), advertising agencies will have to deal with fewer people when purchasing national advertising time, it is also true that the prices they will pay for their national ad campaigns will actually rise as there will be little to no competition for their ad dollars from other over-the-air broadcasters. Historically, this has happened in other areas (think of the farmers versus the railroads in the 1880s and 1890s) and I see *absolutely* no reason why it wouldn't happen in the broadcasting industry.
Consolidation improved the choice of formats, as big clusters could afford to have a broader assortment of formats. When I got into radio, in my hometown, Cleveland, we had 3 Top 40 stations, 3 MOR stations and two R&B stations. Now there are over 20 different formats there!
As far as I can tell, those extra formats that station cluster owners put wern't very profitable, either. What happened (and this appears to be the case with Hubbard and its AM oldies and sports stations in Phoenix) is that the clusters' more profitable outlets are used to prop up the less profitable operations. This will continue to occur until the cluster owner decides that he/she doesn't want to prop up his less profitable stations and then decides to either try to sell the less profitable outlet to a religious or noncom (whose audience [mostly] doesn't support the stations' advertisers) or cancel the unprofitable stations' licenses altogether. And, if the owning company is a publically traded one, the scenario I just laid out will happen more quickly than in privately held concerns.
All but, maybe, one or two executives are nor really likely to have any gain. Everyone in radio is in a position of seeing their job eliminated or their pay reduced.
This is the downside of unregulated market capitalism. Ultimately, and again this has been noted historically, without regulation, the few gain at the expense of the many. And your above paragraph sums that up quite nicely for the field of radio broadcasting.
I built my first cluster in the 60's. By the end of the decade, I had 9 stations in one market, and could afford to do things like an all classical music format; it made money because it shared all the G&A, technical, legal and accounting costs and gave us a certain amount of prestige, too. Half of my stations could not have worked if they were stand-alones and t hat was 60 years ago.
The last point I will make to your response is one that I have made elsewhere but bears repeating. If you have one company or person holding the licenses for all of the OTA broadcasters in a given market, then the political views of those that either do not agree with the owner or who the owner (or corporate head) has a damaging personal relationship with will be aired seldom, if at all. And while that may make for good capitalism it *most certainly* does not help a democracy, no matter how strong that democracy may be.