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Salem Media Group

I don't think his content is considered advertiser-friendly on a national level, unless its precious metals scammers, doomsday prepper supply houses, or far-right PACs, which is basically the type of advertisers Salem already gets on their talkers.
At this point, I don't think most GSMs care what advertisers are selling. Beggers can't be choosers.
 
It’s a non radio property but they announced the pending sale of Salem Church Products for $30 million ($22.5 million in cash and a $7.5 million note).

The deal was announced October 4th and was supposed to close November1. The best I can tell, it hasn’t closed yet.
 
As long as the check clears, or the ACH transfer goes through, dollars are dollars.
That's true, but it's not like what used to be considered the 'advertising bottom feeders' are banging down the door of radio stations these days. AE's are saying a little prayer every night that they can uncover more than a thirty-day contract from someone willing to pay even close to rate card.
 
Assuming anyone other than EMF has cash sitting around, nobody buys stations solely based on coverage. It's all about cashflow potential.
My point was that it's not a crippled rimshot. As I've said elsewhere, coverage is a necessary but not sufficient condition (for success||survival||other objectives).

Whether prevailing stick values are such that Salem could do well selling that FM is a whole other question. Certainly it wouldn't fetch the price that it would have even five years ago.
 
Lance - you hit the nail on the head in your op-ed on your site. I would absolutely love to see Hubbard buy 105.1 WAVA and flip it to Hot AC.

That being said, my gut tells me Salem would want a king's ransom to part with that signal.
 
Assuming anyone other than EMF has cash sitting around, nobody buys stations solely based on coverage. It's all about cashflow potential.

Cash flow potential, however, is better on FM signals that cover their entire markets. I doubt we'll see anyone offer what Salem wants for KRKS-FM for a myriad of reasons (including several you've mentioned), but, were it to happen, the new buyer wouldn't likely be buying the programming along with it. It would almost certainly be bought for stick value only.
 
That being said, my gut tells me Salem would want a king's ransom to part with that signal.

A lot of us would like to see that, but you're right. When it comes to markets Salem is likely to sell, I think the smaller ones are most likely to go. After the deal in Greenville/Spartanburg, I'd be looking at Little Rock to be one of the next markets to go, though EMF already has signals for K-Love and Air 1 there.
 
Fredericks is bottom-feeding at the moment. Most of his purchases are poor signals for low prices. But, the signal doesn't matter for his purposes. It's all about market clearances for his shows.
Must have taken lessons from fellow Virginian Bishop L.E. Willis. Willis was able to purchase as many stations as he did because he got them on the cheap since nobody else wanted them as most were on troubled signals that were engineering challenges. I think Fredericks' Richmond station at 820 AM may have been part of Willis Broadcasting years ago. 820 has a pretty good signal, though.
 
BIN is a format to place on existing derelict AM stations that brings a PR and potentially some national ad dollars for stations left over from the Clear Channel days which still represent debt on the books. iHeart isn't so naive that they would either spend cash reserves or (God forbid) take on more debt to add some additional AM stations knowing full well that AM is circling the drain.

iHeart bought WWRL AM in 2021 to put BIN on it.
 
Cash flow potential, however, is better on FM signals that cover their entire markets. I doubt we'll see anyone offer what Salem wants for KRKS-FM for a myriad of reasons (including several you've mentioned), but, were it to happen, the new buyer wouldn't likely be buying the programming along with it. It would almost certainly be bought for stick value only.
Having assisted with some small deals recently, 'potential' cash flow is more of a consideration than just asset/stick value. What is the potential known formats and what demos would they attract that might be of interest to how much national, and considering the local-direct environment? Estimated, or potential cash flow, is especially of interest to the few lenders around.
Sure, the station needs a full-market signal, but things like fringe coverage or coverage into lower population-density areas are not a thing.
 
The purchase price was undisclosed, but I've heard it was mainly a stock deal. That, and it gives BIN a NYC presence.

$8.5 Million

None of the Salem AM stations would be of similar appeal of being in market #1.

I don't think the post you were responding to was specifically about Salem. It was about how the FCC is expected to loosen ownership caps wrt AM stations in general, and the prospect of iHeart using the opportunity to acquire some AM stations to expand BIN and potentially a similar Hispanic network.

You claimed they would never do that, and I'm pointing out that iHeart has a recent history of acquiring an AM station for precisely this purpose in a top market where they were under the cap.
 
You claimed they would never do that, and I'm pointing out that iHeart has a recent history of acquiring an AM station for precisely this purpose in a top market where they were under the cap.
Got it, but I still maintain this is an outlier situation specifically for another opportunity in market #1. Most groups are steering clear of any new AM purchases because it has no future.
Having a presence with BIN in market #1, as it applies to national ad revenue, they'll probably recover the $8M in a couple years.
I can't see iHeart taking advantage of any of the Salem markets to a similar extent.
Also, it seems counter intuitive, but this isn't 2021 anymore. National and local ad revenue headwinds are only getting stiffer.
 
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Salem announced the pending sale of Regnery Publishing today. They didn’t announce the the amount it sold for though. They expect to close within a week (by the end of the year). That seems awfully fast.

The deal likely avoids any substantial governmental review, including SEC or FCC regulations. So it could very well be a pretty quick transaction.
 
Crazy. Salem’s decline has been fast.

Does Salem make much from their syndicated programming outside of their own stations? I have come across very few non-Salem stations running most of their syndicated programming, unlike Westwood One and Premiere’s offerings.
 
Salem to delist from NASDAQ, going OTC: Salem To Voluntarily Delist Stock from Nasdaq | Radio & Television Business Report

(Article was not paywalled for me)

The spiral continues.
I think it just means that they're not going to go through contortions, such as a reverse split, to keep the stock price above $1. Otherwise, there'll just be a new symbol. Trading might be a little harder on OTC, but not much.

Stock did tank 20% today, but that will hurt any Salem executive whose compensation is tied to stock price more than it will indicate lack of short-term viability. Long-term might be another matter, but I once heard it said that the stock market's idea of a long-term investment is 72 hours.
 
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