Dayton Daily News

Cox, Apollo agree to form media company

- By Thomas Gnau Staff Writer

Cox Enterprise­s and Apollo Global Management LLC have agreed to form a new privately held company to operate Cox’s broadcast television stations, including WHIO-TV, the Dayton Daily News and its other Ohiobased radio and newspaper brands.

Cox Enterprise­s announced Friday it has reached an agreement with funds managed by affiliates of the private equity company to buy a majority interest in the Cox portfolio of 14 television stations.

If the deal receives regulatory approval, the new company would receive all Cox Media Group Ohio media properties, including the Springfiel­d News-Sun and the Journal-News, along with Dayton radio stations WHKO, 99.1 FM; WHIO, 95.7 FM and 1290 AM; and WZLR, 95.3 FM and 101.1 FM; with their affiliated publicatio­ns and websites.

Apollo — a $280 billion private equity company that owns businesses around the world — intends to maintain the management and operating structure Cox Media Group’s TV business has created, Cox said in a statement.

“These stations have decades of experience breaking barriers and delivering the news and informatio­n their communitie­s need daily,” said Alex Taylor, president and chief executive of Cox Enterprise­s. “We wanted to find

a company that is committed to investing in broadcast television now and in the future, and we found that in Apollo.”

Cox Enterprise­s said it will maintain a minority stake and will join the Apollo Funds in forming a new privately held company to operate these stations. The company will be headquarte­red in Atlanta, Ga.

“We are extremely excited for our funds to acquire a majority interest in Cox Media Group’s broadcast tele- vision stations and are humbled by Cox Enterprise­s’ decision to entrust us to steward these stations and carry on the Cox legacy,” said David Sambur, senior partner at Apollo. “We have an extraor- dinary amount of respect and admiration for the journalist­ic integrity, news quality and commitment to community across Cox Media Group’s broadcast stations.”

“We look forward, in collaborat­ion with Cox Enter- prises, to supporting the high standards to which each station operates and contributi­ng to the platform’s future growth and prosperity,” Sambur added.

The transactio­n will be subject to a federal regula- tory approval process that is expected to take approx- imately six months.

The Dayton Daily News and other Cox Ohio newspa- pers, WHIO-TV and its radio stations operate jointly in a combined news-gathering and advertisin­g business.

“The thing that makes Dayton so unique is the way that media properties operate together,” Taylor said in an interview Friday. “It’s one property.”

Upon transfer of the prop- erties, there is no intent to change the way those prop- erties operate, he said.

Cox Media Group said its TV stations “serve some of the most desirable markets in the country and reach a combined 31 million viewers nationwide.”

The history of Cox Enter- prises began in 1898 with company founder James M. Cox buying the Dayton Evening News with its Associated Press franchise for $26,000.

Cox changed that paper’s name to the Dayton Daily News and went on to grow and diversify the company, creating Cox’s first radio station, WHIO, which first went on the air in February 1935.

Taylor expressed confidence in Apollo.

“Our people, our hometown, our businesses are what they’re investing in, and they want to expand it,” he said.

C o x E nterprises announced last July it was exploring strategic alternativ­es for the stations, with the goal of finding “a motivated strategic partner with a shared vision for the future and the resources to continue investing in the business to build scale.”

No value for the transactio­n was given Friday.

A name for the new company will be determined later.

Cox Media Group will retain its ownership of The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on and WSB radio in Atlanta.

The stations, which represent Cox Media Group’s entire television portfolio, are:

■ WSB-TV, ABC Atlanta, Ga.

■ WFTV-TV, ABC Orlando, Fla.

■ WRDQ-TV, Independen­t Orlando, Fla.

■ WSOC-TV, ABC Charlotte, N.C.

■ WAXN-TV, Independen­t Charlotte, N.C.

■ WPXI-TV, NBC Pittsburgh, Pa.

■ WHIO-TV, CBS Dayton ■ KIRO-TV, CBS Seattle, Wash.

■ WHBQ-TV FOX, Memphis, Tenn.

■ WFOX-TV, FOX Jacksonvil­le, Fla.

■ WFXT-TV, FOX Boston, Mass.

■ KOKI-TV, FOX Tulsa,

Okla.

■ KMYT-TV, My Network Tulsa Okla.

Cox Media Group also provides programmin­g, sales and other operations services for WJAX-TV, CBS Jacksonvil­le, Fla.

 ?? TY GREENLEES / STAFF ?? The Dayton Daily News and other Cox Ohio newspapers, WHIO-TV and its radio stations operate jointly in a combined news-gathering and advertisin­g business.
TY GREENLEES / STAFF The Dayton Daily News and other Cox Ohio newspapers, WHIO-TV and its radio stations operate jointly in a combined news-gathering and advertisin­g business.

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