bturner said:Yep, home mortgages are very costly, but would you pay $200,000 for a rental house that rents for $1,000 a month in today's market?
Some people do. Let me turn it around: Would you pay a thousand dollars a month to rent a house that's only worth $70,000? Considering the neighborhood you'd find a $70K house, I think the answer is no.
bturner said:The point I think you and I are both making is the big boys paid way too much for the stations that didn't have the track record to support the price paid.
That's the point you're making. The point I'm making is you're making this judgement in hindsight.
Now, in today's market, stations billing $16 million are worth $8 million. Is that better? You now work in an industry built around properties where the land is worth more than the facilities. You can buy homes in the ghetto for half of what they're worth. But most people don't. Because they don't want to live in the ghetto.
Buying stations at the top of the market didn't cause the current situation. It may have made it harder for owners who paid top dollar. But that isn't why the value of those stations fell. They fell because circumstances in the economy and the media marketplace changed. There was nothing the owners could have done that could have prevented the current situation, and no way they could have anticipated it. Regardless of whether an owner like CC or Citadel is in debt, or an owner like Saul Levine who has his stations paid off and no debt, the reality is that radio revenues are down, the projections are down, and those stations are worth less now than they were ten years ago.