I read some of the legitimate issues raised here about individual Boston radio stations and how several seem like orphaned children almost neglected by its owners who own the cluster because of the crown jewel “station down the hall”
Industry question for the group:
Has large-scale consolidation actually reduced the marketability/liquidity of individual radio stations?
Pre-consolidation, a Boston signal might have had dozens or even hundreds of conceivable buyers. Today, many stations appear economically dependent on cluster synergies — shared engineering, sales staffs, traffic, management, marketing, office infrastructure, digital operations, etc.
If that’s true, then spinning off a standalone station may now require a buyer to recreate a large amount of operational overhead that previously existed at the group level.
At the same time, ironically, many of the large cluster operators themselves have become highly leveraged and financially stressed, with some moving in and out of restructuring or bankruptcy. So not only may individual stations have a smaller buyer universe, but even the pool of potential cluster buyers may now consist largely of companies already carrying significant debt burdens and limited financial flexibility. That may not be able to buy even if they’d like to.
So has consolidation unintentionally narrowed the buyer universe at both the station and cluster level — making radio assets less liquid and potentially less marketable overall outside a group structure?
Industry question for the group:
Has large-scale consolidation actually reduced the marketability/liquidity of individual radio stations?
Pre-consolidation, a Boston signal might have had dozens or even hundreds of conceivable buyers. Today, many stations appear economically dependent on cluster synergies — shared engineering, sales staffs, traffic, management, marketing, office infrastructure, digital operations, etc.
If that’s true, then spinning off a standalone station may now require a buyer to recreate a large amount of operational overhead that previously existed at the group level.
At the same time, ironically, many of the large cluster operators themselves have become highly leveraged and financially stressed, with some moving in and out of restructuring or bankruptcy. So not only may individual stations have a smaller buyer universe, but even the pool of potential cluster buyers may now consist largely of companies already carrying significant debt burdens and limited financial flexibility. That may not be able to buy even if they’d like to.
So has consolidation unintentionally narrowed the buyer universe at both the station and cluster level — making radio assets less liquid and potentially less marketable overall outside a group structure?