Re: Survival of the FATTEST
SirRoxalot said:
Smart players play with house money. They don't bet the rent.
Most radio owners don't mortgage the house to buy a radio station. They put money that they can afford to lose in play, and leverage the buy with shares owned by other investors or the bank.
There are at least two tracks of capitalism going on in radio, and have been as long as I can remember. One is like you describe. People to who "pocket change" may the what some of us put aside in an entire lifetime as our total net worth at retirement time. If you can hob nob with the serious commercial bankers, if financial people think you have family connections or accessible assets you can reach out and touch in an emergency, and if you have already built a track record of establishing several ventures and not one of them ever went sour, then you get to play leverage, selling shares, and protecting yourself with a corporation and not having to put a lien on your house to get the bank money. These are the people who can buy stations with a market price of $1,000,000 or more.
If you are a simple soul who has yet to take your first ownership plunge, If you have been following the radio business and making some relocations and you don't have a personal financial relationship that goes back more than four or five years, you cannot walk into a bank and tell them: I have scraped together $90,000. I need about $25,000 of that for operating capital so I have $65,000 to go toward purchase capital. I want to buy this neat little $300,000 station so I need to leverage by borrowing $235,000. Pretty well impossible in the financial climate of the last few years.
"Back in the day" there were owners who not only did radio because they loved doing it, and they wanted to be "community servants".... and when it was time to retire and sell, they remembered how they got started after The Depression with some help, and they would sell a station on contract payments. (The old capital gains tax avoidance rules almost required them to sell on term or have the tax man eat them alive.
Those days are gone.... as far as I can tell.