Some of the Pappas Telecasting stations filed Chapter 11 bankruptcy papers in a Wilmington, Deleware federal court, Saturday.
Pappas Telecasting Companies of Fresno, California says 13 of its stations are involved, including the umbrella company's KMPH-TV, the Fresno area FOX affiliate.
The goal of the bankruptcy is to accomplish "an orderly sale of the stations as a going concern to preserve asset value,'' Harry Pappas said in bankruptcy court paperwork quoted by Bloomberg.com.
The company says it is the largest privately held television broadcaster in the United States.
Saturday's bankruptcy filings and a bit of web searching show it is a highly leveraged one.
The company reported $536 million in debt and only $460 million in assets on papers filed with the bankruptcy court.
It owes top lenders $303 million. Those include Fortress Credit Corp., which is the largest secured creditor. Fortress and Credit Suisse Securities led a syndicate that did a $305 million re-financing agreement with Pappas in March, 2006.
"The Pappas entities included in the filing were compelled to do so as the conflicts with the mostly non-bank lenders allowed no other sensible option," CEO Harry Pappas said in a company press release.
"We negotiated in good faith for several months and when talks permanently broke down, we
made the filing to protect our ability to serve our viewers, our advertisers and assure the
interests of our employees, and, as importantly, the interests of our lenders," Pappas said.
In December, 2007, Pappas hired a firm to look at its options, among them selling some or all of its stations.
The Fresno Bee reports Pappas owes "more than $5.8 million to its top 20 creditors. The biggest sum owed, $1.4 million, is to Fox Broadcasting. KMPH is a Fox affiliate."
In news stories about the bankruptcy filing, Pappas Telecasting blamed poor CW network ratings for some of its trouble. The cost of making the analog to digital transition was also cited by company founder/CEO Harry Pappas.
The company said it will be business as usual for advertisers and viewers during the bankruptcy process.
Pappas Telecasting said the stations involved are:
KMPH-TV, Fox, Visalia (Fresno), California, the Pappas flagship,
KFRE-TV, CW, Sanger (Fresno), California
KPTM, Fox, Omaha, Nebraska
KXVO, CW, Omaha, Nebraska *Pappas has local Marketing Agreement to provide programming to Mitts Telecasting, licensee of KXVO.
WCWG, CW, Lexington (Greensboro / Winston-Salem / Highpoint) North Carolina
KPTH, Fox, Sioux City, Iowa *My network on DTV .2 signal
KMEG, CBS, Sioux City, Iowa
KTNC-TV, TuVisión, Concord (San Francisco / Oakland / San Jose), California
KAZH, TuVisión, Baytown (Houston), Texas
KDBC-TV, CBS, El Paso, Texas
KREN-TV, CW, Reno, Nevada
KAZR-CA, TuVisión, Reno, Nevada
KCWK, CW, Walla Walla (Yakima / Pasco / Richland / Kennewick), Washington
The release says the Pappas Group operates another seventeen (17) television stations and two (2) radio stations through entities that are not involved in the chapter 11 cases.
Not specifically broken out in the press release are the status of a number of TV, DT, LP, CA or translator stations that are tied to some of the stations involved in the Chapter 11 proceedings. For examples, see this 2007 ownership report:
http://fjallfoss.fcc.gov/prod/cdbs/forms/prod/getattachment_exh.cgi?exhibit_id=531415
The US economic downturn didn't help the companies' situation, but Pappas Telecasting President Dennis J. Davis said some of the bankrupt stations were showing increased revenue:
"KPTM, a Fox affiliate located in Omaha, Nebraska, achieved revenue increases for the first quarter of 2008 of 27.9 percent over the same period in 2007, exclusive of any political advertising," Davis said.
"In Greensboro, North Carolina, WCWG, a CW affiliate, has achieved revenue increases in the first quarter of 2008 of 6.9 percent over the same period in 2007 exclusive of any political revenue," he said.
"In Fresno, California, the Fox affiliate, KMPH-TV has achieved a 2.0 percent increase in first quarter 2008 revenues over the same period last year excluding political advertising," he added.
Davis said that including political revenue, "KMPH-TV has surpassed last year's first quarter performance by 10.4 percent. In fact, more than half of Pappas' full power English language television stations in the various markets in the United States have over-performed in revenue performance as measured by the TVB television revenue survey of over 750 television stations."
Some of the first signs of trouble may have been when the company abruptly ended news broadcasts on its Reno CW and TuVision stations in March and let the news staff go.
Pappas cited less than anticipated income for the single 10 p.m. English and 6 p.m. Spanish newscasts made from a brand new high-tech, HD studio at a Reno mall. Some of the employees were considering a lawsuit about the loss of their jobs.
Several companies have been interested in the stations, the Fresno Bee wrote in a Sunday item about the bankruptcy filing. So far, no deal or deals, but "the sales process shall continue. That is our goal," the Bee quoted Pappas VP/Special Counsel Steven Alfieris.
Some of Pappas' financial trouble can be tied to its attempt to start a new Hispanic network. Announced in 2000, the "Azteca America" was a joint venture with Mexican TV programmer, TV Azteca.
Pappas intended to have ten stations committed the network, and according to the Valley Voice newspaper, had signed deals to buy seven.
At the same time, Univision started the TeleFutura network and bought a dozen full-power stations across the country from Home Shopping Network.
Valley Voice wrote that "reliable sources" said the move by Univision "hurt the Pappas negotiations and all but one of those purchases fell by the wayside with Mr. Pappas losing substantial earnest money he had put up."
By 2002 the deal with TV Azteca had fallen apart, leading to suits and countersuits. A settlement in 2003 committed the Pappas-owned KAZA-TV to Azteca America programming in compensation for $129 million in financing TV Azteca had provided earlier. That deal was extended in Jan., 2008 to 2012.
Citing "underperformance" by Azteca America programming, Pappas pulled the plug on other Azteca America affiliations and started an in-house network called TuVisión.
Hubbed from a new HDTV facility shared with KREN and KAZR-CA in a Reno shopping mall, the network's programming was distributed by IP (internet) circuits to the other Pappas' TuVisión stations.
The TuVisión network may be carried on one of KAZA-DT's digital channels in the LA market, an option worked out in the KAZA-TV/DT extension agreement.
While the $129 million in this deal isn't connected to the current bankruptcy proceedings, it does offer an idea of how leveraged the Pappas holdings are.
An SEC 10-K filing by Ares Capital Corp. shows that at the end of 2007 it held $20,844,789 in "senior secured loans" due in February of 2010, at interest rates of 14.73 percent. They were acquired in March of 2006.
Since Pappas is a privately owned company, it doesn't have to make SEC filings, and the bankruptcy court filing is one window open to what its financial condition is like.
Case Information: In re Pappas Telecasting Inc., 08-10916, U.S. Bankruptcy Court, District of Delaware (Wilmington).
Register here for online access: http://pacer.psc.uscourts.gov/ Cost: 8 cents a page. See FAQ link for details:
http://pacer.psc.uscourts.gov/faq.html#GP1 FAQ link
-----
Links to stories about the Pappas bankruptcy filing:
Pappas Press Release:
videos.pappastv.com/kmph/special/pdf/PAPPASTV.pdf
http://www.fresnobee.com/263/story/590871.html
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601110&sid=aDPd5IDkQv_E
http://news.morningstar.com/newsnet...J/200805101258DOWJONESDJONLINE000266_univ.xml
Background on the company:
http://broadcastengineering.com/news/pappas_shuts_news_reno_0317/
http://www.pappastv.com/index.php
Reno newscasts Start and End:
http://www.pappastv.com/pressdetail.php?id=96&prYr=2007
Valley Voices story about Pappas and TV Azteca:
http://www.valleyvoicenewspaper.com/vvarc/2002/august72002.htm
Financial stories, info:
Fortress Credit Corporation and Credit Suisse Securities re-finance:
http://www.legal500.co.uk/index.php...try_code=usv1_cr&l5directory=us500&Itemid=598
http://www.arescapitalcorp.com/
http://www.snl.com/irweblinkx/doc.aspx?IID=4092627&DID=7403144
Pappas Telecasting Companies of Fresno, California says 13 of its stations are involved, including the umbrella company's KMPH-TV, the Fresno area FOX affiliate.
The goal of the bankruptcy is to accomplish "an orderly sale of the stations as a going concern to preserve asset value,'' Harry Pappas said in bankruptcy court paperwork quoted by Bloomberg.com.
The company says it is the largest privately held television broadcaster in the United States.
Saturday's bankruptcy filings and a bit of web searching show it is a highly leveraged one.
The company reported $536 million in debt and only $460 million in assets on papers filed with the bankruptcy court.
It owes top lenders $303 million. Those include Fortress Credit Corp., which is the largest secured creditor. Fortress and Credit Suisse Securities led a syndicate that did a $305 million re-financing agreement with Pappas in March, 2006.
"The Pappas entities included in the filing were compelled to do so as the conflicts with the mostly non-bank lenders allowed no other sensible option," CEO Harry Pappas said in a company press release.
"We negotiated in good faith for several months and when talks permanently broke down, we
made the filing to protect our ability to serve our viewers, our advertisers and assure the
interests of our employees, and, as importantly, the interests of our lenders," Pappas said.
In December, 2007, Pappas hired a firm to look at its options, among them selling some or all of its stations.
The Fresno Bee reports Pappas owes "more than $5.8 million to its top 20 creditors. The biggest sum owed, $1.4 million, is to Fox Broadcasting. KMPH is a Fox affiliate."
In news stories about the bankruptcy filing, Pappas Telecasting blamed poor CW network ratings for some of its trouble. The cost of making the analog to digital transition was also cited by company founder/CEO Harry Pappas.
The company said it will be business as usual for advertisers and viewers during the bankruptcy process.
Pappas Telecasting said the stations involved are:
KMPH-TV, Fox, Visalia (Fresno), California, the Pappas flagship,
KFRE-TV, CW, Sanger (Fresno), California
KPTM, Fox, Omaha, Nebraska
KXVO, CW, Omaha, Nebraska *Pappas has local Marketing Agreement to provide programming to Mitts Telecasting, licensee of KXVO.
WCWG, CW, Lexington (Greensboro / Winston-Salem / Highpoint) North Carolina
KPTH, Fox, Sioux City, Iowa *My network on DTV .2 signal
KMEG, CBS, Sioux City, Iowa
KTNC-TV, TuVisión, Concord (San Francisco / Oakland / San Jose), California
KAZH, TuVisión, Baytown (Houston), Texas
KDBC-TV, CBS, El Paso, Texas
KREN-TV, CW, Reno, Nevada
KAZR-CA, TuVisión, Reno, Nevada
KCWK, CW, Walla Walla (Yakima / Pasco / Richland / Kennewick), Washington
The release says the Pappas Group operates another seventeen (17) television stations and two (2) radio stations through entities that are not involved in the chapter 11 cases.
Not specifically broken out in the press release are the status of a number of TV, DT, LP, CA or translator stations that are tied to some of the stations involved in the Chapter 11 proceedings. For examples, see this 2007 ownership report:
http://fjallfoss.fcc.gov/prod/cdbs/forms/prod/getattachment_exh.cgi?exhibit_id=531415
The US economic downturn didn't help the companies' situation, but Pappas Telecasting President Dennis J. Davis said some of the bankrupt stations were showing increased revenue:
"KPTM, a Fox affiliate located in Omaha, Nebraska, achieved revenue increases for the first quarter of 2008 of 27.9 percent over the same period in 2007, exclusive of any political advertising," Davis said.
"In Greensboro, North Carolina, WCWG, a CW affiliate, has achieved revenue increases in the first quarter of 2008 of 6.9 percent over the same period in 2007 exclusive of any political revenue," he said.
"In Fresno, California, the Fox affiliate, KMPH-TV has achieved a 2.0 percent increase in first quarter 2008 revenues over the same period last year excluding political advertising," he added.
Davis said that including political revenue, "KMPH-TV has surpassed last year's first quarter performance by 10.4 percent. In fact, more than half of Pappas' full power English language television stations in the various markets in the United States have over-performed in revenue performance as measured by the TVB television revenue survey of over 750 television stations."
Some of the first signs of trouble may have been when the company abruptly ended news broadcasts on its Reno CW and TuVision stations in March and let the news staff go.
Pappas cited less than anticipated income for the single 10 p.m. English and 6 p.m. Spanish newscasts made from a brand new high-tech, HD studio at a Reno mall. Some of the employees were considering a lawsuit about the loss of their jobs.
Several companies have been interested in the stations, the Fresno Bee wrote in a Sunday item about the bankruptcy filing. So far, no deal or deals, but "the sales process shall continue. That is our goal," the Bee quoted Pappas VP/Special Counsel Steven Alfieris.
Some of Pappas' financial trouble can be tied to its attempt to start a new Hispanic network. Announced in 2000, the "Azteca America" was a joint venture with Mexican TV programmer, TV Azteca.
Pappas intended to have ten stations committed the network, and according to the Valley Voice newspaper, had signed deals to buy seven.
At the same time, Univision started the TeleFutura network and bought a dozen full-power stations across the country from Home Shopping Network.
Valley Voice wrote that "reliable sources" said the move by Univision "hurt the Pappas negotiations and all but one of those purchases fell by the wayside with Mr. Pappas losing substantial earnest money he had put up."
By 2002 the deal with TV Azteca had fallen apart, leading to suits and countersuits. A settlement in 2003 committed the Pappas-owned KAZA-TV to Azteca America programming in compensation for $129 million in financing TV Azteca had provided earlier. That deal was extended in Jan., 2008 to 2012.
Citing "underperformance" by Azteca America programming, Pappas pulled the plug on other Azteca America affiliations and started an in-house network called TuVisión.
Hubbed from a new HDTV facility shared with KREN and KAZR-CA in a Reno shopping mall, the network's programming was distributed by IP (internet) circuits to the other Pappas' TuVisión stations.
The TuVisión network may be carried on one of KAZA-DT's digital channels in the LA market, an option worked out in the KAZA-TV/DT extension agreement.
While the $129 million in this deal isn't connected to the current bankruptcy proceedings, it does offer an idea of how leveraged the Pappas holdings are.
An SEC 10-K filing by Ares Capital Corp. shows that at the end of 2007 it held $20,844,789 in "senior secured loans" due in February of 2010, at interest rates of 14.73 percent. They were acquired in March of 2006.
Since Pappas is a privately owned company, it doesn't have to make SEC filings, and the bankruptcy court filing is one window open to what its financial condition is like.
Case Information: In re Pappas Telecasting Inc., 08-10916, U.S. Bankruptcy Court, District of Delaware (Wilmington).
Register here for online access: http://pacer.psc.uscourts.gov/ Cost: 8 cents a page. See FAQ link for details:
http://pacer.psc.uscourts.gov/faq.html#GP1 FAQ link
-----
Links to stories about the Pappas bankruptcy filing:
Pappas Press Release:
videos.pappastv.com/kmph/special/pdf/PAPPASTV.pdf
http://www.fresnobee.com/263/story/590871.html
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601110&sid=aDPd5IDkQv_E
http://news.morningstar.com/newsnet...J/200805101258DOWJONESDJONLINE000266_univ.xml
Background on the company:
http://broadcastengineering.com/news/pappas_shuts_news_reno_0317/
http://www.pappastv.com/index.php
Reno newscasts Start and End:
http://www.pappastv.com/pressdetail.php?id=96&prYr=2007
Valley Voices story about Pappas and TV Azteca:
http://www.valleyvoicenewspaper.com/vvarc/2002/august72002.htm
Financial stories, info:
Fortress Credit Corporation and Credit Suisse Securities re-finance:
http://www.legal500.co.uk/index.php...try_code=usv1_cr&l5directory=us500&Itemid=598
http://www.arescapitalcorp.com/
http://www.snl.com/irweblinkx/doc.aspx?IID=4092627&DID=7403144