DAY THE MUSIC DIED
iHeartMedia, with $20B in debt, is singing about bankruptcy,
NEW YORK— iHeartMedia Inc., the biggest U.S. radio-station owner, filed for bankruptcy with a plan to halve its debt load of more than $20 billion (U.S.), the legacy of a leveraged buyout that hobbled the company as the digital era spawned new rivals.
iHeart, with about 850 radio stations and 17,000 employees worldwide, filed for Chapter 11 protection on Wednesday in Houston, a move that allows iHeart to keep operating while it tries to cement its turnaround plan. The deal still needs approval from the court and some holdout creditors, and the company could hear again from John Malone’s Liberty Media, which has said it wants a stake in the reorganized media giant.
“Achieving a capital structure that finally matches our impressive operating business will further enhance iHeartMedia’s position as America’s #1 audio company,” chief executive officer Robert Pittman said in a statement.
After trying to ink a deal with creditors since last March, the company said that it reached an accord with investors holding more than $10 billion of its debt, along with its private-equity owners, Bain Capital and Thomas H. Lee Partners. Their leveraged buyout in 2008 was the reason for much of iHeart’s borrowing, and the company hasn’t posted an annual net profit for a decade. While cash has run short, iHeart said there’s enough on hand, along with what it can earn from operations, to keep the business going, cutting the need for expensive new bankruptcy loans.
The company’s free broadcast and internet radio platform iHeartRadio has recorded an average of 1.8 million listeners in Canada each month since its launch in October 2016 as part of a licensing deal with BCE Inc. unit Bell Media. A spokesperson for parent iHeartMedia said the company does not own stations and has no employees here, since the franchise agreement has seen Bell manage Canadian music licensing, marketing and distribution while providing content from Bell properties. With additional media partners on board, including Evanov Communications, the service has been available across more than 1,000 radio stations in Canada, and iHeartRadio said it will be business as usual during the restructuring. The company came to terms with its senior lenders just hours before filing for bankruptcy, company treasurer Brian Coleman said in court papers filed Thursday. But one holdout group, owed $190 million, has refused to join the deal and will likely fight the restructuring, Coleman said.
iHeart’s Clear Channel Outdoor Holdings Inc. unit, which is 90-per-cent owned by the bankrupt company, wasn’t included in the filing. The deal hands control to iHeart’s senior creditors.
Among creditors is Malone’s Liberty Media, which controls satellite radio giant SiriusXM. Liberty Media accumulated a position in iHeart’s debt in recent months with an eye on gaining a stake in the radio business. Liberty sought to break the logjam in negotiations late in February by offering new capital and loans in return for a 40-per-cent stake, and has said it’s willing to go higher.
While Liberty isn’t mentioned directly in the restructuring documents, the agreement leaves room for potential bids by third parties and analysts have said iHeart holders probably haven’t heard the last of Liberty’s offer to inject capital and provide loans.
Speaking on a March 1 earnings call, Liberty chief executive officer Greg Maffei cited “substantial synergies” between the ailing iHeart and two other Malone investments: the majorityowned satellite radio giant Siri- usXM Holdings Inc. and Pandora Media Inc., the online music company where Liberty took a minority position last year. iHeart and Pandora, meanwhile, could share advertising technology and sales forces, Maffei said. iHeart’s is larger than those at Pandora and Sirius, he said.
About 265 million people in the U.S. still tune in to iHeart’s stations at least once a month, but newer media such as Spotify’s streaming service and SiriusXM’s satellite broadcasts have cut into the audience and put a damper on sales. iHeart countered with its own streaming services and a live-events business offering concerts and awards shows. The heavy debt was a drag on those efforts, draining $1.4 billion a year in interest payments, according to Coleman.
iHeart’s traditional businesses — the radio stations and the Clear Channel Outdoor billboard unit — still contribute the bulk of its revenue. Its $20 billion in debt makes it the largest bankruptcy in the last year, and around the 30th largest ever.