The Palm Beach Post

Sinclair to purchase Tribune Media

Nation’s largest local TV station operator will grow from 173 to 233 sites, reach 72% of all households.

- Associated Press Informatio­n from The New York Times was used in this report.

NEW YORK — Sinclair Broadcast Group, already the nation’s largest local TV station operator, wants to be even bigger.

The company announced Monday that it will pay about $3.9 billion for Tribune Media and its 42 stations, which includes KTLA in Los Angeles, WGN in Chicago and WPIX in New York. Chicago-based Tribune also owns stakes in the Food Net work and job-search website CareerBuil­der.

Sinclair has 173 stations, including KUTV in Salt Lake City, KOMO in Seattle and WKRC in Cincinnati. The Tribune deal, plus other pending acquisitio­ns, will give it a total of 233 stations, putting distance between it and rival Nexstar Media Group, which has 170.

Sinclair said it may have to sell some stations to comply with Fed- eral Communicat­ions Commission rules, although the FCC has recently loosened rules related to media ownership. Sinclair is also in the process of buying Bonten Media Group, which owns 14 stations, for $240 million.

In all, Sinclair said its stations will reach 72 percent of all U.S. households with a TV once the Tribune and Bonten deals close.

Jeffrey McCall, a media studies professor at DePauw University in Indiana, said buying Tribune will give Sinclair more power to negotiate better deals with cable companies and national advertiser­s. Adding Tribune’s stations will also expand Sinclair’s reach into major cities that it didn’t have a presence in before, such as New York and Chicago. “It makes them a bigger boy on the block, so to speak,” said McCall.

Public interest groups, however, opposed the deal. Public Knowledge, which is typically against media consolidat­ion, said Monday that the deal will reduce “viewpoint diversity” and contribute to the “homogeniza­tion of broadcasti­ng.” It asked the Department of Justice and FCC to reject the deal.

Late last year, Sinclair had to defend itself against news reports that it made a deal with Donald Trump’s presidenti­al campaign for favorable coverage in its newscasts. In a December statement , Sinclair said that it had no such deal with Trump’s team and that it had given both him and his Democratic rival Hillary Clinton “the same opportunit­ies to be interviewe­d by our local anchors on a regular basis.”

Since President Donald Trump picked Ajit Pai, a Republican, as its chairman, the FCC has eased limits on the ownership of local TV stations, paving the way for a potential deal frenzy among broadcaste­rs.

The commission reintroduc­ed what is known as the UHF discount, under which broadcaste­rs can exclude from ownership caps stations that use ultrahigh frequencie­s.

The change effectivel­y lowered Sinclair’s coverage of U.S. households to about 25 percent from a current limit of 39 percent, freeing it to pursue acquisitio­ns.

On Monday, Sinclair said it will pay about $43.50 in cash and stock for each share of Tribune, an 8 percent premium from Tribune’s closing price of $40.29 on Friday. The Hunt Valley, Maryland-based company values the total transactio­n at $6.6 billion, when debt is included.

The deal is expected to close by the end of the year.

Shares of Sinclair Broadcast Group Inc. fell 82 cents, or 2.2 percent, to close Monday at $36.13. Shares of Tribune Media Co. rose $2.11, or 5.2 percent, to $42.40.

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