New York Post

TEGNA TALKS SNAG

$8B TV deal in doubt

- By JOSH KOSMAN

TV-station empire Tegna has hit a roadblock in negotiatio­ns with suitors who are looking to buy the company in a deal worth $8.4 billion, sources close to the situation said.

Hedge fund Standard General and Apollo Global Management on Nov. 22 raised their fully financed offer for Tegna from $22 to $22.65 a share, valuing the firm at roughly $5 billion and also agreeing to assume their $3.4 billion in debt, sources close to the situation said.

Tegna shares on Friday closed down 1.7 percent at $19.52.

The raised bid came after Tegna had failed to accept or reject the initial offer made two months earlier, according to the sources.

A collapse in talks would represent the third time in as many years that Tegna — spun off from newspaper giant Gannett in 2015 as a separate, publicly traded company — has weighed a possible sale only to have it scrapped in the end. The Virginia-based company operates 64 television and two radio stations across 54 US markets.

In recent weeks, insiders say Tegna has asked the bidders to agree to a “hell or high water” condition, meaning they would not walk away from the merger no matter how long it took to get through regulators. Tegna also has demanded a high breakup fee of about $500 million, sources said.

Standard General and Apollo are comfortabl­e with the first condition but have countered with a breakup fee about half as big, sources said.

Sources said Tegna has voiced concerns whether the Standard General and Apollo bid can withstand antitrust scrutiny from the Federal Communicat­ions Commission. The FCC’s national media ownership rule prohibits any entity from owning commercial television stations that reach more than 39 percent of US television households nationwide.

Tegna’s stations combined with those that Apollo and Standard General already own would surpass that mark. Apollo plans, though, to keep its current stations and Tegna separate, sources said.

Tegna, meanwhile, has signaled it believes it is worth over $25 a share and negotiatio­ns have stalled.

By year-end, a deal will likely come together or Tegna will announce it is remaining public, sources close to the situation said. The company’s shares, which were hovering Friday around $20 a share, would likely fall to about $18 without a deal, a hedge-fund manager following the situation said.

Tegna declined to comment.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States