Texarkana Gazette

Nexstar offers just over $4B for Tribune Media

Company owns KTAL-TV Channel 6

- —From Staff and Wire Reports

IRVING, Texas—Nexstar, the company that owns KTAL-TV Channel 6, is offering to buy Chicago’s Tribune Media for about $4 billion Monday, four months after the collapse of a similar bid from Sinclair Broadcast Group.

The deal would make Nexstar, whose stations reach nearly 39 percent of all U.S. television households, the biggest operator of local TV stations in the U.S. Yet it still must be approved by federal regulators, as well as shareholde­rs.

KTAL-TV, which is based in Shreveport, La., and is a local NBC-affiliated station on Channel 6 for the Texarkana area, is owned by Nexstar Media Group. Before being owned by Nexstar, WEHCO Media operated KTAL-TV and announced in July 2000 that it would sell the channel to Nexstar for $35.25 million.

The Sinclair-Tribune deal appeared to be gliding toward approval over the summer until Federal Communicat­ions Commission Chairman Ajit Pai said in July that he had “serious concerns” about the deal.

Sinclair had agreed to shed almost two dozen of its own to score approval by the FCC. But Pai said Sinclair might still be able to operate the stations “in practice, even if not in name.”

Tribune Media owns or operates 42 local TV stations that reach 50 million households, as well as the national network WGN. It also has a stake in the TV Food Network.

There has been a significan­t push for consolidat­ion of local TV stations that must compete for advertisin­g dollars with major tech companies.

There has also a political aspect in the acquisitio­ns of local stations. Sinclair, which operates in 89 U.S. markets, has become a significan­t outlet for conservati­ve views.

It was admonished by media watchdogs in April after Deadspin, a sports news site, pieced together clips of dozens of TV anchors for Sinclair reading from the same script, which warned viewers about “biased and false news” from other media outlets.

Nexstar will pay $46.50 per Tribune share. The companies value the transactio­n, which also includes debt, at $6.4 billion.

In August Tribune called off its buyout by Sinclair, arguing that the company used “unnecessar­ily aggressive and protracted negotiatio­ns” with the Department of Justice and Federal Communicat­ions Commission over regulatory requiremen­ts, and refused to sell the stations it needed to in order to gain regulatory approval. Sinclair said at the time that it did not mislead the FCC.

The deal with Nexstar is expected to close in the second half of 2019, if approved by regulators and shareholde­rs.

Tribune’s stock jumped nearly 10 percent early Monday, while shares of Nexstar gained 2.8 percent.

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