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Entercom says no to 'cash infusion' deals and cut-rate ads

http://www.philly.com/philly/busine...cash-discounted-ads-kwy-pandora-20180215.html

Well Entercom according to this article is doing its best to avoid the same pitfalls that put their competitors into debt issues. The cash infusion deal and cut rate ads according to the article is being compared to pay day loans.


They were the radio industry’s equivalent of payday loans. Big station groups facing revenue shortfalls traded cut-rate advertising air time for quick cash.

These cash infusion deals helped publicly traded radio station groups, among them Bala Cynwyd’s Entercom Communications, hit financial targets and please Wall Street.

They also deluged radio airwaves with commercials discounted 20 percent to 60 percent from what local stations themselves sold to advertisers. Now cash infusion deals are haunting businesses struggling with debt and digital competition from the likes of Spotify and Apple Music. Station group owner Cumulus Media filed for bankruptcy protection late last year and iHeartMedia, the nation’s largest station owner, is teetering on bankruptcy, with stock trading for 55 cents a share.

Entercom’s share price is trading 35 percent off its 52-week high even after it closed on its $4 billion deal for CBS Radio last November. Entercom is the nation’s second-largest radio group, with a portfolio of more than 200 stations, including Philadelphia’s all-news KYW, sports talker WIP and four other stations.

CBS Radio, formerly part of CBS Corp., pumped the well of cash infusion deals and Entercom has said it will end the practice and, at the same time, cut its ad inventory by 5 percent. Fewer ads could boost radio’s listener enjoyment. Experts said that eliminating cash infusion is expected over time to bring pricing discipline back to radio ads if the ban can hold — a big if for an industry awash in ad spots.

Entercom CEO David Field has said that radio is “massively undervalued” because of its audience reach. The company will announce fourth-quarter earnings on Tuesday and declined requests for comment.


Radio insiders have cheered Field’s attempt to tame cash infusion deals. But they also question whether his ban will hold as they became like a narcotic for radio executives as ad revenue slowed but station owner groups were still expected to hit their numbers.
 
Good! While any benefit from such discipline will take time to bear fruit, such a move from a group as large as Entercom might move the ad rate needle.
 
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