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/ 05.04.2009 12:00AM
Scripps TV Revenues Fall 20 percent
CINCINNATI: The 10 TV stations belonging to E.W. Scripps lost money in the first three months of 2009. The segment posted a net loss of $2.4 million on revenues of $60.4 million in 1Q09, compared to a profit of $14.2 million on revenues of around $76 million last year.
1Q09 revenues by category for the stations were:
- Local, down 22.1 percent to $35.6 million.
- National, down 16.9 percent to $18.4 million.
- Other, which includes retransmission, rose 41.5 percent to $4.2 million.
- Political was $177,000, compared to $3.1 million.
The decrease in the local and national revenue was attributed reductions in automotive, financial services and retail ad spending, and to the typical election-cycle stage. Cash expenses for the station group were $62.8 million, up from $61.8 million a year ago. Increased pension benefits costs, and a curtailment charge related to the company's plans to freeze the pension plan later this year, more than offset a 5 percent decrease in other employee costs. Programming costs were 12 percent higher due to contractual increases for syndicated programming in several key markets.
A $216 million non-cash charge on intangibles--$192 million in the TV division--drove consolidated results to a net loss of $220.8 million on revenues of $205.4 million. The consolidated revenue result was nearly 20 percent off from one year ago, when the company posted a profit of $8.6 million. Cash and equivalents stood at around $10 million as of March 31; long-term debt was $73.1 million.
Shares of Scripps (NYSE: SSP) fell to around $1.87 from an open of $1.96 for the day and from closing at more than $2 on Friday. -- Deborah D. McAdams
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Thursday 12:00AM
Broadcasters File Suit Against FCC’s Political File Rules
“The FCC decision to put the political files online will bring broadcasters into the 21st century, and will make already public information more easily accessible to everyone.” Free Press Senior Policy Counsel Corie Wright.