iHeartMedia Files for Bankruptcy

Official word of the latest chapter in the ongoing financial woes that have hampered iHeartMedia over the past decade, reporting that the company has filed for bankruptcy protection in order to try and secure some relief from an excess of $20 billion in debt on its balance sheets



The company said the agreement it ‍reached with holders of more than $10 billion of its outstanding debt would restructure its balance sheet by transferring 94 percent of the stock in the reorganized company to its lenders.
IHeartMedia has struggled with debt that was taken on to finance a $17.9 billion leveraged buyout, or LBO, in 2008 of what was then Clear Channel Communications Inc. That deal led by Bain Capital LLC and Thomas H. Lee Partners LP closed just as a financial crisis began to undermine the U.S. economy.
In the years that followed, the operator of 849 radio stations has faced intensifying competition for advertisers and listeners from internet platforms such as music streaming services.
“The LBO put this massive debt on the balance sheet that the company was supposed to grow into,” a lawyer for iHeartMedia told U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Marvin Isgur at a hearing in Houston on Thursday. “We’re here to right-size the balance sheet.”
The company traces its roots to the 1972 purchase of KEEZ-FM in San Antonio, Texas, where it is currently headquartered. It said it would fund the business and bankruptcy process from cash on hand and cash generated from operations.
It said in a statement it was seeking to maintain business as usual during the bankruptcy and to “uphold its commitments” to its staff. It employs 12,400 people, according to court records.
The filing comes less than four months after Cumulus Media Inc, which operates 445 U.S. radio stations, filed for Chapter 11.
IHeartMedia had $3.58 billion in revenue in 2017 and reaches 271 million radio listeners, which the company says gives it a wider reach than Alphabet Inc’s (GOOG.O) Google. The company also sells advertising on digital platforms, at live concerts and on syndicated programs featuring personalities such as Rush Limbaugh and “American Idol” host Ryan Seacrest.
However, the company spent $1.4 billion on interest payments last year and has more than $8 billion in debt maturing by the end of 2019.
The company’s lawyers told the court iHeartMedia was on the cusp of having enough support from creditors to impose its plan on hold-outs.

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Under the company’s debt-cutting deal, holders of secured loans and secured notes, who are owed nearly $13 billion, agreed to accept about $5.6 billion in new debt and 94 percent of the equity in a reorganized iHeartMedia, according to court documents.
These creditors also will receive iHeartMedia’s 89.5 percent stake in Clear Channel Outdoor Holdings Inc (CCO.N), the world’s largest billboard company, which did not file for bankruptcy.
IHeartMedia also proposed that junior debt holders, who are owed more than $2 billion, will receive their pro rata share of 5 percent of the equity in the reorganized company and $200 million in new secured notes.
Existing shareholders would receive 1 percent of the stock in the reorganized company, according to court documents.
IHeartMedia faces a legal challenge from a group, led by investment fund Angelo, Gordon & Co, which holds $190 million of junior debt, according to the company.
Their lawyer said at Thursday’s hearing they plan to file a lawsuit to challenge the contention that they are low-priority unsecured creditors, and Isgur said he wanted a hearing on that dispute before April.
IHeartMedia has drawn interest from John Malone’s Liberty Media Corp (FWONA.O), which proposed on Feb. 26 a deal to buy a 40 percent stake in a restructured iHeartMedia for $1.16 billion. The deal would unite iHeartMedia with Liberty’s Sirius XM Holdings Inc (SIRI.O) satellite radio service.



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