Don’t know what you are talking about but taking money out of your own private company is not illegal or embezzlement. It’s reported owner distribution. You pay tax on it.
If you're talking about a small mom-and-pop operation, the number of shares may be spread across one or two people. The owner is on the payroll, including withheld taxes like anyone else. If the shareholders or board of directors decide bonuses for the major or minor shareholders, a separate taxable amount would be levied. The fact remains that small businesses that decide to just pluck money out, put their businesses' future in jeopardy. I've seen some small sleazy operators creatively pull money out by voting bonuses to themselves, only to face financial hardships later because now their business has no cash reserves should something go wrong. Just look at how many of these sleazy operators have walked away from small markets when a transmitter burns up, or a tower needs replacement. I can give you many examples, but there have been plenty of examples right here on this site.
I have a station we work with in Watertown, and the owner has the business under an LLC, that files as an S-Corp.
That's what I said. Most companies are a form of corporate entity and need to work within the rules for federal and state incorporation laws.
He pays himself in owner distributions monthly from the cash flow/profit, files it as owner draw, and pays his tax rate.
Cash flow and profit aren't the same thing. Cash flow is the money that flows through (in and out) of the business during a given period, while profit is whatever remains after all taxes and costs are deducted. You can have high free cash flow but because of debt, expenses, or other costs, leave no profit.
Also, yes it has always been a cash flow business, but it was also a business that increased in value.
Not sure what you've been doing in the past sixteen years, but all broadcast properties have lost at least 50% of their value starting in 2008. And the values have only gone down from there. Even larger market stations in the past five years have lost an additional 30% due to advertising slowdowns.
Now, it is only a cash flow business. The value is no longer growing, in fact it is receding big league.
If you buy a station now, plan to own it for life, or sell it at what you bought it for, or less.
So, are you contradicting your prior statement that broadcasting is a "
business that increased in value"? Sure appears that way.
I will add this that broadcast TV is in even worse shape. In that platform, not only do you have a plethora of options with streaming, but the networks give the stations very little ad inventory to sell
The amount of inventory for network O&Os or affiliates hasn't changed in years. The problem is national and local direct to fill that inventory is depressed. The real threat is if the networks decide to make good on their threats to cut prime scripted programming. In that case, local stations would need to come up with syndicated something to fill what would normally for many years be valuable breaks.
, unless it is locally produced, like news, and you don’t have to be a rocket scientist to realize that less and less people are getting their news from broadcast tv.
Oh, believe me, being in the TV business for 25+ years, nobody thinks that there are more local TV news viewers on the horizon.
But the only thing that makes TV worse than radio is the scale. TV still has more eyeballs over longer periods of hours a week, that's why candidates and PACs buy a lot of political ads. Radio doesn't come close to the political buys. The problem is; when the elections are over this November, then what?