• 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

Connoisseur Media To Acquire Alpha Media

In the next Cumulus bankruptcy might some of their stations be bought by Connoisseur Media? Or all of Cumulus?

He alluded to that in this interview with Barrett Media


I don't think he'll sell KBAY. That station is really well managed. I think Jeff likes the country format and wants to expand it to other stations.
 
He alluded to that in this interview with Barrett Media


I don't think he'll sell KBAY. That station is really well managed. I think Jeff likes the country format and wants to expand it to other stations.

Those are great words in the article and it seems that he has the right philosophy. We'll see if he can scale it up.
 
In the next Cumulus bankruptcy might some of their stations be bought by Connoisseur Media? Or all of Cumulus?

Well, let's start with what stations Cumulus owns, by market. Now compare that with both Connoisseur and Alpha Media (since we can presume, at least for the moment, that those two lists will be the combined one after the merger; I don't see any potential spinoffs to honor market caps here).

Looking at the Cumulus station portfolio in context: There are no potential conflicts in Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Massachusetts, Nevada, New Mexico, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, and Tennessee since the combined Connoisseur/Alpha Media portfolio has no existing conflicts in those states (and of course, also including states not listed here that have no Cumulus-owned stations).

Connecticut is probably fine. Cumulus owns an AM and two FMs, but they are in a different market than any of Connoisseur's holdings. Same for New York, and we can also clear Iowa, Kentucky, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Ohio, and Oregon by comparing Cumulus to Alpha Media (no shared markets).

Most of California is fine, except (as alluded to in previous posts) San Francisco/San Jose: Cumulus owns four AMs, one recently taken silent, and two FMs, one of which simulcasts an AM. Alpha Media owns five FMs. Something (or, more accurately, four somethings) would have to go here.

Illinois: Mostly okay, with one huge exception. Alpha Media only owns stations in Chicago, but it's at the legal limit ... five FMs and two AMs. Cumulus owns two FMs and one AM. Three stations would have to be spun off.

Kansas has two problematic markets ... Topeka, and by market definition Kansas City. In Topeka, Alpha Media owns three FMs and one AM, Cumulus owns the market limit of five FMs and two AMs. In KC, Cumulus has six FMs and one AM but Alpha Media has a lone AM/FM combo. (There are no other conflicts in Missouri besides the Kansas City market, which overlaps both states.)

Louisiana? Despite Cumulus having a total of 22 stations statewide, the only conflict is Shreveport, the only market in the state where Alpha Media owns stations. Cumulus' lone AM is silent, and they have four FMs; Alpha also has one AM and four FMs.

South Carolina has a conflict in Columbia, where Alpha Media owns five FMs and Cumulus owns four FMs and a silent AM. Rest of the state is fine.

Texas: Amarillo is (maybe) a problem. Cumulus owns four FMs and a silent AM, Alpha Media owns two AMs. Rest of the state has no shared markets.

Salt Lake City, Utah is problematic as Cumulus owns five FMs and two AMs; Alpha Media owns two FMs and an AM.

These counts of course do not include translators as those do not count against market caps.

But it doesn't look to me that there would need to be a huge number of spinoffs, although it would still be a noticeable number. If Jeff Warshaw is even half as smart as I believe he is, a merger with Cumulus would include taking a lot of AMs in the conflicting markets silent. (Or maybe donated to MMTC for reassignment.)
 
But it doesn't look to me that there would need to be a huge number of spinoffs, although it would still be a noticeable number. If Jeff Warshaw is even half as smart as I believe he is, a merger with Cumulus would include taking a lot of AMs in the conflicting markets silent. (Or maybe donated to MMTC for reassignment.)

My view on this is they're not in a rush. He waited a long time to make the offer on Alpha. I expect he'll wait until that closes and he's actually running those stations before his next acquisition. By then, Cumulus may have made some more moves in preparation for sale. The other thing to watch is the FCC. Do they loosen the caps? If they do, it may only be in major markets or remove AMs from counting against the cap. Either way, that helps in a few places.
 
Kansas has two problematic markets ... Topeka, and by market definition Kansas City. In Topeka, Alpha Media owns three FMs and one AM, Cumulus owns the market limit of five FMs and two AMs. In KC, Cumulus has six FMs and one AM but Alpha Media has a lone AM/FM combo.
Huh? If you're talking about the Bethany and Cameron stations in Missouri - first, that's two AMs and two FMs, operated together as a cluster; second, if that cluster covers anything in the Kansas City market, it's not much.

Yes, DeKalb County may be in the Kansas City TV market - actually, looks like it's in the St. Joseph market - but if that county and Harrison County are in the Kansas City radio market, something's seriously off. Harrison is in the Kansas City TV market only due to cable/satellite coverage.

In short, I firmly doubt there will be a problem.
 
Texas: Amarillo is (maybe) a problem. Cumulus owns four FMs and a silent AM, Alpha Media owns two AMs. Rest of the state has no shared markets.
Actually Alpha has two FMs and one AM in Amarillo, so an Alpha/Cumulus merger would require some spinoffs, unless ownership caps are relaxed.
 
Huh? If you're talking about the Bethany and Cameron stations in Missouri - first, that's two AMs and two FMs, operated together as a cluster; second, if that cluster covers anything in the Kansas City market, it's not much.

I tried the best I could based on station lists that were defined by market name. If they were wrong then those errors transferred to my summary.

Just so you all know, it took me the better part of an hour to do that this morning. Based on the nitpicking, you can be assured I won't do anything like that again. :mad:
 
I tried the best I could based on station lists that were defined by market name. If they were wrong then those errors transferred to my summary.

Just so you all know, it took me the better part of an hour to do that this morning. Based on the nitpicking, you can be assured I won't do anything like that again. :mad:
Sorry if you think that was "nitpicking". I was trying to understand where you got that information. It didn't comport with what I knew of the Kansas City or nearby markets. I looked at the Alpha website, where they list all their markets in a drop-down, and that confirmed what I knew.
 
Cumulus has some time to make a deal if they choose. According to their website last quarter they have $23.9 "total debt due" in 2026 and $52.7 million in cash end of the quarter. I don't follow them and haven't looked at their debt in a couple of years so there could be a "time bomb" in the future debt wise.


I wouldn't advise anyone to buy Cloud Company stock based on this info. In fact once I get out of WBD I doubt I will never buy any "media" stock.


IMHO buying Cumulus would be a gamble. I personally would like to take my "gambling money" to a Casino. At least you would get comped food or a room if you lose a couple of grand. Before corporate ownership, if you lose 5 figures or more some casinos had the "reputation" of even getting you "over night companionship" "on the house". Of course now that would never happen now thanks to corporate audits. No I never lost more than a $750 so I didn't get the free room or the "extra" room service". I did get a free show and free food once.
 
Status
This thread has been closed due to inactivity. You can create a new thread to discuss this topic.


Back
Top Bottom