it's like Westinghouse but on private equity steroids, I mean it wont be the last time that a San Antonio corporate bought out buy PEs outside of Texas. Whataburger based in SA and previously Corpus Christi bought by a Chicago firm but I didn't see a Whataburger in the windy city. I mean DFW and Houston are the biggest while Austin is growing so much so why not invest in SA? How the politicians react to iHeart moving out of SA as HQ?
There's also the reverse. Steak N Shake was an Indiana company bought by a San Antonio firm. I was told it was a much better place to work before the people from Texas came in and bought it out. We also know how well that has worked. Steak N Shakes are closing everywhere, and anyone with $10,000 can take over a corporate (or former corporate) location. Judging from all the boarded up Steak N Shakes I see around St. Louis, it’s not getting many takers.
Restaurants and grocery stores, like radio, tend to be low margin and low growth businesses. The average profit margin of a restaurant is 4%, and I don’t believe it’s much higher for grocery stores. Radio can achieve higher than both, but I've never worked for a radio cluster that was happy or comfortable with its margins. That's what cutting all the local talent in smaller markets is about: pushing up those margins. Not sure where they expect to find the next generation of talent. I wasn’t exactly surprised CBS didn’t find a good replacement for Stern 16 years ago, and we had more small and medium market talent back then. Now, even in small markets, talent stays for years, probably because there are fewer opportunities in the large and major markets, too. At my local Cumulus cluster, the FM a stations have one or two local jocks, and almost all of them have been there longer than 20 years.