radio-darn said:
I recall that after CC bought Jacor, AMFM, and the billboard company (remember "synergies"?) they had a market cap of about $60 million - now the combined market cap for CC media and CC outdoor is under $20 billion.
I think you mean "had a market cap of about $60
billion..."
Remember that CC spun off Live Nation and gave shares to the CC stockholders; you have to add Live Nation to any before-and-after comparison.
And some of the "purchases" were actually mergers in the form of stock trades... AM/FM was folded into CC via an equity transaction.
In any case, the "enterprise" of CC today has suffered no more than and sometimes less than other pure radio plays. Whether you look at SBS or Cumulus or Emmis, all radio companies are trading at just a few percent of their peak values in the mid to late 90's.
They also lost huge amounts in asset values as Dave notes, and they have close to $20 billion in long-term debt. Yet somehow, you just know, Bain will make money on this - certainly the Mays haven't gone to the poorhouse because of these lost billions: ordinary stockholders and former workers have born the brunt of the losses.
Bain and TJL will likely take a haircut on this. They made a deal before the economy started to crash, and had to go through with what was fundamentally the same deal. The Mays got their share of the proceeds, and the shareholders got, in my opinion, a lot more from the deal than they would have gotten if the deal had cratered and they sold the shares on the market.
Radio One popped at $20 a share, and got up to $90 per split adjusted share. Today, ROIA and ROIAK are trading at about $1.05 a share... less than 2% of their peak. Emmis peaked at around $30, and is now at less than $1.40, below 5% of the pre-recession peak.
As to workers, between the active unemployed and those who have given up, we have a real unemployment rate of about 15% so laying the blame on the Mays family, Bain and TJL or Clear is disingenuous. The real issues are old media, radio and the economy.