New York, Jan 9 : US media giant Tribune Co emerged from bankruptcy, ending four years
of Chapter 11 reorganization and potentially setting itself up for a future
without newspapers.
Tribune's controlling owners, which include hedge
funds Oaktree Capital and Angelo, Gordon & Co, and JPMorgan Chase & Co
intend to sell most, if not all, of its newspapers and already have expressions
of interest for The Los Angeles Times, The Orlando Sentinel and others, media
has reported.
For now at least, the Chicago-based company said its
portfolio would include eight major daily newspapers and 23 TV
stations.
Tribune's newspapers remain profitable despite the falloff in
readers and advertising. Veteran newspaper analyst John Morton, President of
Morton Research, estimated the Los Angeles Times could fetch $130 million at an
auction, while the Chicago Tribune could garner $86 million in a
sale.
Oaktree is the biggest Tribune shareholder, owning about 23 percent
of the company while Angelo Gordon and JP Morgan each hold a 9 percent
stake.
"Tribune will emerge as a dynamic multi-media company with a great
mix of profitable assets, powerful brands in major markets, sufficient liquidity
for operations and investments and significantly less debt," Chief Executive
Eddy Hartenstein said in a statement.
As part of the Chapter 11 exit, the
company closed on a new $1.1 billion senior secured term loan and a new $300
million asset-based revolving credit facility.
The term loan will be used
to fund certain payments under the plan of reorganization and the revolving
credit facility will be used to fund ongoing operations, the company
said.
Tribune's most actively traded debt, a $5.5 billion loan due in May
2014, was most recently trading at 83 cents on the dollar.
Upon exiting
bankruptcy, Tribune will have issued to former creditors a mix of about 100
million shares of new class A common stock and new class B common stock, and new
warrants to purchase shares of new class A or class B common
stock.
Hartenstein will remain CEO until the new Tribune board names a
new management team. Peter Liguori, a former Discovery Communications chief
operating officer, is expected to be named CEO.
The company announced a
seven-person board that includes Hartenstein, Liguori, former Yahoo CEO Ross
Levinsohn and Peter Murphy, Walt Disney's former top strategic planning
executive.
Tribune is expected to focus on building its TV operations. In
its portfolio, it owns WGN America, a national feed of Tribune's Chicago TV
stations that it distributes through cable and satellite to more than 76 million
U.S. homes.
Horizon Media analyst Brad Adgate said WGN could expand its
base by 20 million to 25 million homes if it adds original programming to its
lineup.
Tribune's TV operations are estimated to account for $2.85
billion of the company's $7 billion valuation, while its publishing assets are
estimated to represent $623 million, according to a report by its financial
advisor, Lazard. The rest of its value resides in assets including its 30
percent stake in the Food Network and its cash balance.
In November,
Tribune received regulatory approval from the Federal Communications Commission
to transfer its broadcast licenses to the owners who would take it over after
emerging from bankruptcy.
Real estate magnate Sam Zell stunned the media
industry when he took the company private in 2007 in an $8.2 billion leveraged
buyout that burdened the company with debt and that many observers warned would
be disastrous. Tribune was forced into bankruptcy in 2008.
The company's
reorganization plan was confirmed by the Delaware bankruptcy court in
July.
Ends
SA/EN
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Publisher Tribune emerges from four-year bankruptcy
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