Posted on 06/08/2009 2:47:27 AM PDT by abb
Chicago-based Tribune Co. and its creditors are in the early stages of negotiating a plan of reorganization in U.S. Bankruptcy Court that sources said likely would transfer control of the troubled media conglomerate from Chicago billionaire Sam Zell to a group of large banks and investors that holds $8.6 billion in senior debt.
The plan is still taking shape, the sources said, and much could change as negotiations continue.
But the general contours of a new capital structure are coming into focus, and the plan centers on a debt-for-equity swap that probably would give the senior lenders a large majority ownership stake in the reorganized company.
A source with knowledge of the situation said the plan would wipe out a $90 million warrant Zell negotiated as part of his $8.2 billion deal to take the company private in 2007. The warrant gives the Tribune Co. chairman the right to buy about 40 percent of the company for $500 million and is the basis of his control over Tribune Co., which owns the Chicago Tribune.
Zell also holds a $250 million note representing a loan he made to the company as part of the going-private transaction. That note, however, is near the bottom of the hierarchy of claims in Tribune Co.'s Chapter 11 bankruptcy case, and the source said it is unlikely it would retain any value as the capital reorganization proceeds.
Bankruptcy experts said the plan's outline raises questions about whether the senior lender group would want to retain Zell and his management team or seek new leadership for the company. It also poses the question of whether Zell would want to stay without a large ongoing stake in the company.
snip
(Excerpt) Read more at chicagotribune.com ...
ping
http://recoveringjournalist.typepad.com/recovering_journalist/
That Loud Yelp You Hear is Newspapers Being SqueezedAgain
http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/entertainmentnewsbuzz/2009/06/marshall-herskovitz-says-he-has-secret-plan-to-rescue-tv-pilot-system.html
Marshall Herskovitz says he has secret plan to rescue TV pilot system
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/08/business/media/08globe.html?ref=business
After Months of Tension, Globe Votes on Cuts
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/08/business/media/08weinstein.html?ref=business
Weinstein Company Takes Step to Ease Debt
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/08/business/media/08iht-free.html?ref=business
Free Papers Faltering in Downturn
http://adage.com/article?article_id=137133
Not That You Were, TV Networks, but Don’t Count on Chrysler in the Upfront
http://adage.com/digital/article?article_id=137135
Maybe Hulu Really Wants to Take over the (TV) World
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/278595-FCC_Cuts_4_Stations_From_List_Of_Ones_Said_To_Go_Dark_June_12.php
FCC Cuts 4 Stations From List Of Ones Said To Go Dark June 12
http://www.poynter.org/column.asp?id=101&aid=164801
Boston Globe Union Weighs High-Stakes Vote Monday
http://www.editorandpublisher.com/eandp/index.jsp
E&P ‘Question of the Day’: Will Most Newspapers, in Print, Be Gone in 10 Years? Join the Debate Now
Hmmm.... There were no mention of the unions? Will they end up with no stake? It was the pressrooms that made the company great ya know
I’ve not read too much about the situation with the Tribune’s unions. Since they’re in bankruptcy, all that’s up in the air, I suspect.
I’m intrigued with the rise and fall of the Chandler clan. Much like, the Ochs and Sulberger families at the NY Times, the Chandlers built an immense publishing fortune and now is all gone.
Gone with the wind...
I have on my to order list with Amazon a bio of Otis Chandler.
http://books.google.com/books?id=FCvoJFg5jjYC
Privileged son: Otis Chandler and the rise and fall of the L.A. Times dynasty
By Dennis McDougal
A little flashback...
http://spectator.org/archives/2008/08/08/no-otis-chandler
No Otis Chandler
By George Neumayr on 8.8.08 @ 12:08AM
http://www.boston.com/business/articles/2009/06/08/contract_vote_today_for_guild_as_drivers_approve_globe_cuts/?page=full
Contract vote today for Guild as drivers approve Globe cuts
So the banks take over the Tribune from Zell..The same banks that are under the Treasury thumb because of TARP?....start connecting the dots....
Perhaps. But there’s no ‘there’ there. Very little property, plant or equipment to liquidate. The only ‘asset’ that they have is an ongoing concern that distributes ink on paper with paid advertising.
Not long for this world.
Why don’t some Globe employees take the train don to NYC and picket outside Punch’s apartment building?
http://timwindsor.com/2009/06/04/livetweeting-the-end-of-local-news/#idc-container
Livetweeting The End of Local News?
http://newsosaur.blogspot.com/
Facing up to life after print for newspapers
Deal or no deal: Boston guild votes
The Globes biggest union may reject deal with NYT Co.
From the article: Chicago-based Tribune Co. and its creditors are in the early stages of negotiating a plan of reorganization in U.S. Bankruptcy Court ...
These things almost always take years, unless you are Chrysler and the government is able to screw your creditors. Come back in 18 to 24 months from now to get the real story.From the article: The plan is still taking shape, the sources said, and much could change as negotiations continue.
In other words, this "news article" is a speculative piece, like so much other garbage that is called news these days.From the article: The plan centers on a debt-for-equity swap that probably would give the senior lenders a large majority ownership stake in the reorganized company.
Yep. Secured creditors get everything until their claims are satisfied, unsecured creditors are next, stockholders come last -- if anything remains at that point.From the article: The plan would wipe out a $90 million warrant Zell negotiated as part of his $8.2 billion deal to take the company private in 2007.
Yep. As noted above, stockholders come last.From the article: The plan's outline raises questions about whether the senior lender group would want to retain Zell and his management team or seek new leadership for the company.
That's assuming the Tribune even survives. Most companies with negative cash flow from operations are wound down, unless they can trim some fat somewhere -- like from union contracts. My guess, this was done long before the Tribune filed.Bottom line: The twits are are cooking up a "news article" about themselves, based in part on established legal procedures, and in part on wishful thinking. In doing so, they are merely demonstrating their ignorance of basic business principles and business law.The question of retaining Zell and his management team is moot. They had their chance and lost. Almost everybody worth having has already moved on.
What a novel concept.
Lenders may get control of a Bankrupt corporation.
Unless 0b0z0 appoints a Newspaper Czar and lets the union members own and control the Newspaper.
Can’t happen. Look at Government Motors and Chrysler.
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