David Field |
“We are only 100 days into this transformation and these things take time,” Entercom CEO David Field told analysts. He added that he remained optimistic about radio and still considers acquiring more stations, reports philly.com.
Entercom closed on its $4 billion deal for CBS Radio last November, including six CBS Radio stations in the Philadelphia market.
Entercom’s revenue almost doubled to $246.6 million because of the consolidation of the CBS Radio stations in the fourth quarter into its operations. Net income available to Entercom common shareholders swelled exponentially to $232.4 million from $10.8 million in the prior-year quarter — but because of a huge noncash benefit from President Trump’s tax overhaul.
Company executives and Wall Street analysts noted the difficulty of comparing Entercom’s profits and revenues for the fourth quarter because of the timing of the CBS Radio deal, federal tax law changes, millions of dollars in merger-related costs, and asset sales.
But Field gave some color to the big changes underway, such as the company hiring of corporate executives, replacing top managers at radio station clusters, cutting costs, and launching advertising initiatives.
“We fully understood that CBS Radio was performing weakly and that job No. 1 was turning that around,” Field said.
While revenues at CBS Radio stations fell 6 percent in the fourth quarter, they fell 3 percent at legacy Entercom radio stations, Field said. The 2016 fourth-quarter revenues were boosted by political spending associated with the Trump election.
Entercom’s revenues in the first quarter at the nation’s second-largest radio station group are “pacing down” about 3 percent, Field said. But, he added, “We are making excellent progress on our goals.”
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