KYND's daytime coverage was pretty exceptional with everything working as it should. It covered Houston and the metro quite well. When they upgraded, they bought farmland. I'm guessing at best but I bet they got enough for that land they had on Cypress-Rosehill to pay for the new location property, all the equipment and engineering. They didn't opt for nighttime and considering the expense and coverage, nighttime was just not worth it. A translator, however, was turned down. They didn't want to invest in it. It seemed they didn't believe what I was telling them. (and no Isreal Tellez was not rebroadcasting KYND in Dilley, Texas, some 150 miles away with another 1520 maybe 30 miles away - KQQB).
What was happening in Houston was not so much the value of the AM station but rather there are more stations brokering their airtime to programmers than there are programmers buying time. The rate literally fell to 50% and was not going back up by the time I left KYND.
AM daytimers like KYND, regardless of it's 25,000 watt signal, is a dying breed of station. Maybe they can find someone to lease it for about $20,000 a month. Even so, they never considered any $20,000 offer I took to them , saying they needed to go up to $25,000 or $30,000 a month in a year. I personally feel that with the current market, it would be best to find a way to live at the $20,000 range perpetually. In fact, I'd be willing to do a rent to own contract if I was the name on the license. The owners are good people, just not radio people.