How is that different from any other AM station?
It's not. But KDKA was a pioneer in that as well.
There were thousands in this town with their dials frozen on 1020 by the 1950's.
How is that different from any other AM station?
There were thousands in this town with their dials frozen on 1020 by the 1950's.
KDKA is the second highest biller in the market. Why would anyone want to make anything except minor changes to it?
I am guessing you do not live in Pittsburgh, and thus do not have to listen to it.
Once that cadre of elderly people whose dials are permanently frozen on 1020 go on to their eternal reward, they've got serious trouble.
Their former news director told me that they lose ten listeners a day via the obituary column.
I am guessing you do not live in Pittsburgh, and thus do not have to listen to it.
Once that cadre of elderly people whose dials are permanently frozen on 1020 go on to their
eternal reward, they've got serious trouble.
As David points out, it's not a loophole. What happens in a like-kind swap is that the new property swaps base values with the old one. A good example of this for CBS is some of the stations it acquired in the mid-90's. Since it paid high multiples for a lot of those stations, it wouldn't incur the tax liabilities for selling those stations off that it would for some of the legacy holdings.
One exception, however, is what's now Bloomberg 99.1 in Washington DC. Because it was acquired as part of a swap with the former SFX Broadcasting involving the former KTXQ and KRRW in Dallas (one a legacy CBS station, the other swapped for a legacy CBS station in the early 90's), it likely has the base value of either KTXQ or the long-gone WYNF 94.9 in Tampa. So, selling it would likely incur a high capital gains tax because even today's prices are more than what it paid to acquire those stations.
To put it into perspective, in either '77 or '78, KBEQ 104.3 in Kansas City set the record for the highest price ever paid for a standalone FM. It was sold for $7 million. CBS already had what was then a full compliment of 7 FM's, and none were acquired for anywhere near that price. Even some of the stations it acquired in the 80's were for around that price. Can you imagine what they'd sell for today? Even at a preferential capital gains tax rate, the tax bill due would be staggering. Plus, capital gains can only be canceled out by capital and ordinary losses and, unless things have changed (and I'm not an accountant; so, they could have), a corporation can only carry a capital loss forward for three years. So, CBS can't use the losses it took on stations 10 years ago to offset the gains it would make by selling more stations today.
But unlike the stations that CBS acquired in the 90s, the Miami cluster has just been acquired by CBS. Those stations now have an owner crisis (much like an identity crisis, but they have different owners, who knows who will own them. iHeart and Cox is too full. I think Entercom has some room.
I am wondering about the AMP Radio branding, as despite being successful, it will probably be one of the major brand "suicides", because CBS Radio is selling all it's stations, and for the AMP Radio brand to live on, there has to be an owner who can acquire all the AMP Radio stations while keeping the other sister stations in an AMP Radio market (like NYC) together.
Who knows what will happen to radio.com, last.fm, and play.it?!
IDK about Orlando, maybe Beasley will enter Orlando as it's one of the rising radio groups. Alpha is rising, but only has one market (West Palm Beach) in Florida.
I think some of you are overthinking this whole thing. When he made this announcement earlier this week, Les Moonves said his goal was to increase shareholder value. At the time, CBS stock was trading at $51 a share. The next day, it was trading at almost $55 a share. Mission accomplished. He didn't actually sell a thing, he just improved shareholder value. That's how the market works.
And Moonves has made similar statements along the lines of "we're thinking about getting out of radio" before, with the same results in the stock price.
I sense Chicken Little syndrome is starting to affect these threads about CBS' radio division ...
And Moonves has made similar statements along the lines of "we're thinking about getting out of radio" before, with the same results in the stock price.
I sense Chicken Little syndrome is starting to affect these threads about CBS' radio division ...
When will the Boy Who Cried 'Wolf' syndrome start to affect the oh-so-gullible money-changers of Wall Street when corporate executives put such obvious stock-price-boosting speculation out there?
doubtfulMaybe the third incarnation of Infinity Broadcasting?
Does that say anything about how Wall Street views radio? Or does it signify something else?
So, a CBS corporate executive sort of threatens to get the company out of the radio business, and that is taken as a positive on Wall Street, boosting stock prices.... Does that say anything about how Wall Street views radio? Or does it signify something else?
And if the audience stops listening sooner or later these sponsors are going to quit buying the blocks.
I seriously doubt the CBS Radio Division is losing money. IF the results are broken out and IF this is the case, it's because of an allocation of overhead to the division that's intended to make another division look better.