Exactly. Corporate finance isn't binary, where you either do well in the market or you're dead.From what I see, we're talking about roughly $18 million. They have that money on hand. This is about negotiating, not liquidation.
Exactly. Corporate finance isn't binary, where you either do well in the market or you're dead.From what I see, we're talking about roughly $18 million. They have that money on hand. This is about negotiating, not liquidation.
Doesn't matter in the scheme of things. They're already on the cusp of being delisted. I'm sure behind the scenes they and their lawyers are working on alternatives going forward.The latest (article was not paywalled for me): Audacy Quietly Releases Q3 Results As Restructuring Is Considered | Radio & Television Business Report
Audacy stock trading around 36 cents when checked just now. Had they not done the 1 for 30 reverse split it would literally be a penny stock.šš¤Æ
Based on other media stocks, it likely will never make it back to $4 a share.Once again, the stock market is irrelevant to the restructuring discussions. It's a side show. If they solve the restructuring without blowing things up, that doesn't mean the stock will go back to $12.
Yep.The stock isn't going to improve because they kicked the can down the road. Unless there's a buyer, the stock will stay a penny stock.
Groups are worth much more together than broken up. Audacy's stations are profitable, just not enough to pay the current debt.Letās say Audacy goes straight down in flames. What happens to the active stations. Auction? Who could pick them up.
Advertising is not "drying up". We are in a new form of recession, mostly driven by high interest rates and much more of family budgets going for housing. So there is less discretionary advertising, and more places to put the dollars available.Lets go a step further. If the radio industry collapses and the advertising drys up. What happens to the band. How many stations are just left to go dark. How long can this be propped up if there is no money in it.
But lenders know that the best option is to keep it alive, as broken into pieces the pay-off would be about $0.20 to $0.30 on the dollar. So granting extensions and, maybe, exchanging some debt for equity is the better solution.The company has about $57 million in cash left as of 9-30-23, virtually no credit facility borrowing availability, and managed to burn through about $46 million in cash in the first 9 months of 2023 despite borrowing $39 million in new debt and raising about $33 million in proceeds from asset divestitures.
Yikes.
Unless additional near term significant asset divestitures are in the cards (to replenish cash and to allow for performance of interest payments), this company is skating on very, very thin ice.
The key issue is that the operations are profitable. But the debt is overwhelming and the company has no growth prospects and a very poor new media position. The ones who suffer are shareholders, but the stations are making money.Based on other media stocks, it likely will never make it back to $4 a share.
Which could be said for most traditional radio groups that are publicly traded.The key issue is that the operations are profitable. But the debt is overwhelming and the company has no growth prospects
And stock analysts can't stand traditional media-anything, so companies like Audacy with all their collective eggs in one OG radio basket are tossed to the side like a used Kleenex(tm).and a very poor new media position. The ones who suffer are shareholders, but the stations are making money.
Unlevered net cash flow from recurring sources after maintenance capex is running maybe $10 million per quarter on average in the current advertising climate. The Q3 2023 result appears to be even worse. Bear in mind this is *after* I add back non-recurring / non-cash losses to income.The key issue is that the operations are profitable. But the debt is overwhelming and the company has no growth prospects and a very poor new media position. The ones who suffer are shareholders, but the stations are making money.
Any suggestion this company's operating cash flow is somehow decent is at complete odds with financial reality.
I don't see how they will solve this using conventional advertising. They need something else. The fact that event revenue held steady after the investment they made in it two years ago seems to be a problem. The competition is doing better in this sector.We'll see if the 2024 campaign season helps give revenue and overall cash flow a nice lift.
Audacy reported Adjusted EBITDA of $41 million year to date. CapEx has been $36 million. Yeah, not much wiggle room there.While Audacy generates enough cash flow to cover payroll and pay vendors, after capex, there is not much left for debt service, if anything at all.
Their investments in digital products (i.e. podcasts) has similarly been anemic. They grew digital revenue only 3% year-over-year, and +2% in the same quarter last year. In other words they got beaten by inflation two years in a row.I don't see how they will solve this using conventional advertising. They need something else. The fact that event revenue held steady after the investment they made in it two years ago seems to be a problem. The competition is doing better in this sector.
Given what we know now, media companies who either purchased or built up podcasting divisions have suffered significant losses for mostly the same reasons traditional radio suffers; lack of sufficient advertising support. Fortunately, diversification and cuts have helped other media companies get through it, but when you have lots of debt from traditional media purchases is where the problem comes in for Audacy.Their investments in digital products (i.e. podcasts) has similarly been anemic. They grew digital revenue only 3% year-over-year, and +2% in the same quarter last year. In other words they got beaten by inflation two years in a row.
I agree. And unlike TV, radio doesn't see anywhere near the level of political buys during a presidential year and depending on the market. Whatever political dollars from PAC's or political campaigns are a fleeting bonus. Once election day rolls around, stations are back to pounding the pavement hat in hand.I don't see how they will solve this using conventional advertising. They need something else. The fact that event revenue held steady after the investment they made in it two years ago seems to be a problem. The competition is doing better in this sector.
Exactly. If you are in a "swing State" and/or important Primary State, and your station is in a large market in that State, the presidential campaign ads are there. If you are not, then radio primarily gets the state and local contests. You have to look at that revenue as a bonus, not core.I agree. And unlike TV, radio doesn't see anywhere near the level of political buys during a presidential year and depending on the market. Whatever political dollars from PAC's or political campaigns are a fleeting bonus. Once election day rolls around, stations are back to pounding the pavement hat in hand.