grantchester said:
Yes, you say half were not profitable, but the reasons you give are a little cloudy, David. Back before 1982, there were FCC rules for showing the financial resources to operate a station. That changed, and allowed speculators to get into the business.
I don't recall when the FCC first started requiring annual financial reports (essentially a P&L) but it goes bact to the 50's, per the Broadcasting Yearbooks from the era.
The only resources one had to show to get a CP or get a transfer were funds to build and operate for a year or to continue operating. It was a minimal requirements.
What changed things a bit was the relaxation of the three-year rule on holding a license or to be accused of trafficing. But the operators in the 70's and 80's were, in their vast majority, very small. 7&7 in radio did not allow for much synergy, for a much of a career path for emplyees and there was no significant investment capital.
They bet on the ever-increasing value of radio, counting on a limited supply.
I don't agree with that. Multiples, except for the "buy it or lose it" period from '96 to about '99, station prices, like all other businesses, were based on multiples that had more to do with the cost of money at the time than with the value of the radio station. In peridods of higher interest, lower multiples applied. In periods of low interest rates, multiples increased as they were the basis for ROI calculations on the investment.
[/quote]Then the FCC changed the rules, increasing the supply of licenses. Many, like Mr. Hicks, lost their bet. It wasn't because the staff didn't do their jobs; they succeeded. The financing failed. Hicks paid 16 million, GE flipped it to Van H. Archer III for 3 million.[/quote]
As I said, there were very few cases like that. Most stations consitently increased in value, with any variation pegged more to the economy and interest rates.
Lowry picked up KEEZ (hi ray) for a song, just before FM became commercially viable.
He bought it in about '75, right? In that year, FM had over 45% of all listening, and was extremely viable. I worked briefly for Art Keller in '69 and he had several viable FMs then.... three years prior, I had a viable, profitable FM in Ecuador. there were many, many profitable FMs by '75. Lowry picked up one of the badly run ones.
The previous owner lost his bet. Lowry won his. Likewise the WOAI deal; AVCO had a high cost structure, which CC (hi J. Barger) dismantled.
Looking at Duncan's first editions back then, WOAI had little in the way of ratings... high cost, nobody listening. I would have dismantled it, too.
Yes, you are correct, businesses always look to trim expenses, but to use the Government and the leverage of consolidation against the value of the work provided by employees was unfair, especially since it was based on a false premise.
There were many reasons for consolidation, including the fact that alternate media choices were multiplying with the financing of companies like Time Warner and Viacom and such. And most of the rest of the world had allowed multi-station ownership in each market for decades, while the US was treating radio as a cottage industry; the only government supported programs were from the SBA!
Radio station owners with just a few stations had to compete with cable networks, the already-announced arrival of Satellite radio, etc. It was time to let radio be a competitive business on a larger scale.
like having a Houston announcer do the news for a San Antonio news/talk station.
Most of the world, including the G8 nations of Europe, have had national networked radio for decades. The idea of a station being voice tracked does not seem particularly alarming compared to Germany or France or Spain where 95% of the radio audience goes to stations with one studio and a hundred or so repeaters all over the nation.
The bottom line is that clusters don't compete.
The good ones do, and you can see that in the sharing tables of Arbitron. Small clusters of two or three stations may not, but the larger ones copete and overlap all over the place.