Register   |  Login Free Newsletter Subscription
Subscribe to B&C Magazine
Email
Print
Reprint
Learn RSS

Top 25 Station Groups at a Glance

By John M. Higgins and George Winslow -- Broadcasting & Cable, 4/24/2006

After a four-year slide, the station market has picked up enough to start shaking up the ranks of the largest station owners. But the collapse of UPN and The WB threatens to spoil some of the dealmakers' fun.

B&C's Top 25 at a Glance
Station groups are ranked by the FCC's calculation of coverage, which discounts by half the reach of UHF channels a particular group may own. That coverage can't exceed 39%. The total-coverage figure is without the FCC discount. If a group owns more than one station is a market, the additional stations' coverage i s not counted in the group's total.
Rank Company FCC % Total % 2005 Rank
1 CBS Corp. 38.52% 42.35% 1
2 Fox TV Stations 37.98% 44.62% 2
3 Ion Media Networks (Paxson) 31.30% 62.60% 4
4 NBC Universal 29.77% 34.38% 3
5 Tribune 29.98% 40.23% 5
6 ABC 23.34% 23.59% 6
7 Univision 22.79% 43.68% 7
8 Gannett 17.75% 17.92% 8
9 Trinity Broadcasting 16.96% 33.92% 9
10 Hearst-Argyle 15.38% 15.94% 10
11 E. W. Scripps 13.97% 21.85% 11
12 Belo Corp. 13.24% 13.97% 12
13 Sinclair 12.48% 21.85% 13
14 Raycom 10.24% 12.47% 17
15 Cox 10.02% 10.15% 14
16 Media General 9.59% 10.91% 20
17 Clear Channel 8.57% 12.43% 15
18 Pappas Telecasting 7.72% 12.50% 16
19 Meredith 7.59% 9.07% 18
20 LIN TV 7.52% 8.66% 23
21 Post-Newsweek 7.38% 7.38% 19
22 Entravision 6.39% 12.69% 21
23 Young 5.78% 5.82% 24
24 Gray Television 5.74% 6.27% 25
25 Nexstar 4.84% 7.11% NR
NR=Not rated
Source: BIA Financial Network

Broadcasting & Cable's annual tally of the Top 25 TV Station Groups finds that a flurry of deals over the past nine months has triggered more shifts among the top ranks of the industry than we've seen in years.

After the 2000 dotcom bust, plunging ad revenues and station prices largely froze the market in place. Further, the industry's hopes of easing federal ownership restrictions faded as courts blocked looser regulation. Rather than sell into a weak market, station owners waited for a revival.

That recovery seems to have started last year, when buyers flocked to the auctions of Emmis Communications' TV unit, paying startlingly high prices. Several other deals soon followed.

NBC TV Stations stands to fetch $600 million in a deal to unload small- market stations, sending it down the list from third place last year to fourth this year. Ion Media, (until recently, known as Paxson Communications) steps up into third place.

“The station market looks relatively healthy from the standpoint of what we saw based on the interest on the four stations,” says NBC TV Stations President Jay Ireland of the deal with Media General, whose operation rises four spots, to 16th place, as a result.

Fox Television Stations nearly became the No. 1 broadcaster, but CBS Corp. remains in the top slot thanks to the havoc caused by Mother Nature. CBS cut a deal to sell its New Orleans UPN station, WUPL, to Belo Corp. last summer, but Belo walked away after Hurricane Katrina, claiming contractual protection from a “material adverse change” of conditions. WUPL stays with CBS while the company pursues a lawsuit against Belo.

Emmis falls off the list entirely, having sold 13 out of 16 stations.

As the sellers shrink, the buyers grow. LIN Television jumped three places, from 23rd to 20th, after buying part of Emmis' portfolio. Raycom Television rose three spots, from 17th to 14th, after taking over Liberty Corp.

The biggest impediment to market momentum is the upheaval among the smaller broadcast networks. Since January, when CBS and Warner Bros. announced the demise of The WB and UPN, stations have been scrambling to affiliate with one of the new networks, CBS/Warner Bros.' The CW and Fox's My Network TV. Station buyers, meanwhile, are standing on the sidelines watching the show.

“How do I value these things?” asks longtime station broker Frank Boyle of Frank Boyle and Associates. “The answer is, it ain't an easy question to answer.”

The turmoil of the new networks has already thwarted Granite Television's planned sale of WB affiliates in San Francisco and Detroit. It also stymied Emmis' sale of its WB affiliate in Orlando, Fla. My Network TV and The CW don't even start until September. It's natural to believe that would-be station buyers will wait to see how—or if—those new players work out. The answer to that will, no doubt, determine some slots on next year's B&C's Top 25. Stay tuned.

Email
Print
Reprint
Learn RSS

Talkback

We would love your feedback!

Post a comment

» VIEW ALL TALKBACK THREADS

Related Content

Related Content

 

By This Author

There are no other articles written by this author.

PRODUCT WIRE




 
Advertisement

More Content

  • Blogs
  • Podcasts
  • Photos

Blogs

  • Kate Bacon
    Fates & Fortunes

    October 1, 2008
    Midwest and a little bit north
    Switching from broadcast sales to cable sales is LINDSEY GERMONO. She’s in the Hampton Roads a...
    More
  • Kate Bacon
    Fates & Fortunes

    September 26, 2008
    Capital News All Round
    Columbia, SC’s ABC affil, WOLO, has a new Station Manager. Upped from being Program Operations...
    More
  • » VIEW ALL BLOGS RSS

Podcasts

Photos

  • Sarah Palin's TV Land Lookalikes
    Forget Tina Fey. B&C has compiled a gallery of dead ringers for Alaska Governor Sarah Palin from the world of TV.
  • The 60 Minutes Clock, Through the Years
    CBS' 60 Minutes is celebrating 40 years on the air and, as the show has evolved, so has its signature clock logo.
  • Showtime Showhouse
    Cable Network Showtime & Metropolitan Home Magazine partnered to turn a brownstone house near Gramercy Park into a luxurious & artistic representation of its programs. Each room is inspired by the Network's shows.

    Photographs taken by Lucy Hemmings.

Advertisements





B&C NEWSLETTERS

Click on a title below to learn more.

Broadcasting & Cable Today
B&C HD Update
B&C Telco IP Update
B&C Local Cable Advertising Sales
B&C Hispanic Television Update
B&C International Update
B&C TechTalk
B&C NewsCentral
©2008 Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Use of this Web site is subject to its Terms of Use | Privacy Policy
Please visit these other Reed Business sites