majaman78 said:
CBS is gaining strength with television and internet. They just sold 4 radio stations and in my opinion will divest all of their radio interests in the next few years as a large debt payment becomes due in 2010.
CBS is the most "terrestrial media" based of all the networks... see the article and analyis in last week's Business Week. Almost all the Internet and Cable went to Viacom, and except for lastFM, they really have a lot less than any of the other Big 5 Networks in the web area; CNet has even been written down and is widely considered to have been a bad buy anda bad fit.
The TV margins are way down as CBS continues to do the $8 million an episode scripted show model while ABC, FOX and NBC have much higher percentages of unscripted shows. The growth area is outdoor, which is not saying a lot.
CBS does have a fairly high amount of debt, mostly from the bad web purchases. What concerns me is s Redstone's debt which could cause a change in control of the company.
The current, and very good, CBS management in radio, has stated repeatedly that they want to be out of markets outside the top 15 to 20 and those markets where the cluster does not have critical mass. And they have sold a number of the properties that don't make the cut, but their worth is not significant either now or before our merry little depression started.
The major market stations are huge cash cows, even in this economy. The value as cash flow generators is much more than what anyone might pay for them.
Even if you believe investment analysts, I don't see any pure play public brocasters currently with a buy rec. Most of them abandoned the sector several years ago.
There are very few pure play radio or just radio and TV companies. Emmis has magazines, Clear (which does have shares out there) is half an outdoor company, Salem has publishing and web divisions, etc. The sector lost coverage because there is not musch to buy, and many of the companies are covered, as the case of GE, by a different industy analysis.
[/quote]EBITA is a very poor and even misleading mechanism when used to approximate cash flows.[/quote]
It's the standard in media, entertainment and related fields where inventory, COGS, etc., are poor metrics. It's the closest easy metric that there is to show the results on operations of industries where there is not much of a tangible asset base.
It doesn't exclude all non cash items, only depreciation and amortization. Among the non cash items not adjusted for in EBITA are bad debt allowances, inventory write-downs, and stock options granted.
As I said, the related industries have essentially no inventory (commercial time not being recoverable if not sold, ietcl.) and bad debt charges are treated as a reserve based on prior recent periods and expensed. Stock options have been given a new treatment by the APB and are booked differently now; there are so few in any industry that are above water that this point is irrelevant.
.... I'm pausing to giggle a little about the idea of "inventory" at a radio station being impactful. Let's see, there are 10 boxes of T-Shirts in the prize room... but, uh, they were expensed since we don't sell them.
Unlike proper measures of cash flow EBITA ignores changes in working capital, and additional investments in working capital consumes cash.
And the purpose of EBITDA is to show the results of operations, stripped of all non-operating items. That's why it is the perfect measure of industries like radio, TV and films that deal pretty much in intangibles.
Lastly, like most of these broadcasting companies, if they over or under reserved restructuring expenses or bad debt allowances, their earnings will be skewed and thus their EBTIA misleading, especially if they recognize revenue prematurely or disguise ordinary costs as capital investments.
I don't know what the obsession with bad debt is; even in a recession stations run credit checks on new clients and generally have only 90 to 120 days of exposure, with the write-offs being a very small percentage of revenues. And they are reserved for each billing cycle, so the variance is often zero at the end of an accounting period.
Oh, and more risky kinds of business, like concerts, are generally prepaid.
If there is any kind of restructuring, it is not generally recurring. And that's again why EBITDA is a good measure of the health of the business.
If you see a quick rise in short term interest rates (which IMO might very well happen), a lot of these companies will disappear.
Generally, interest rates on long term debt is fixed or tied to things like prime; they are currently so far below the minimum rate specified in the deal that there is an immense margin of safety.
None of this, of course, changes the fact that formats that draw unalable audiences get eliminated.