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Sirius: Merger or Chapter 11

Posted Dec 04 2007, 11:39 PM by allant
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This post was written by Douglas McIntyre of the blog 24/7 Wall Street: 

Goldman Sachs hit Sirius and XM Satellite with serious downgrades today.  It knocked down shares of both companies by 5%.

What analysts don't want to say is that the future of satellite radio in the U.S. could already be coming to an end.  A merger between the two companies may be the only alternative they have to stay in business.  Each company has well over a billion dollars in debt.  Sirius had negative operating income last quarter of $106 million on $242 million in revenue.  XM was in the red to the tune of $108 million on sales of $278 million.  And XM shows only $275 million in cash on its balance sheet.

Sirius had 7.7 million subscribers at the end of last quarter and XM had 8.6 million, but those numbers no longer double year-over-year.  That may be because other forms of entertainment have taken over in the car.  When satellite radio was launched a decade ago the rear-seat entertainment device was not all the rage.  The Apple iPod did not exist.

The market seems to forget that the shares of these two companies trade as if they were going out of business.  In early 2000, Sirius traded close to $70.  It is now lucky to see $3.50 on a good day.

Sirius and XM are lobbying the FCC to approve their merger on the basis that there is plenty of new digital competition and that a combined company would not be a monopoly.  In the strictest sense, it is one, of course.  The government licenses the rights to be in the business and, in a merger, there would be only one company with those rights.

But, the FCC may have a more practical reason to give a merger the green light. With limited cash on their balance sheet, tight credit markets, slowing subcriber growth, and huge quarterly losses, both companies could disappear.

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Comments

 

I certainly hope these companies don't go out of business, I love my XM radio.  It keeps me from having to listen to all the local crap.

hooray for Howard on bankrupting the company.

Satelite radio is no longer cutting edge. It is boring, repetiative and commercial. I have had XM for the past 3-4 years and have let my subscription run out. I am tired of of overpaid, under entertaining shock jocks and endless commercials. All of this and I get to pay $12 mo.

Maybe Sirius needs to file BK so that someone with some sense can decide what Howard Stern is really worth! It sure isn't $500 million dollars!

This merge should be approved A.S.A.P if you think this a monopoly then don't subscribe to satellite. I can't believe that our goverment doesn't have anything more important to focus on. How about putting less effort to block this merger and more effort on getting our troops out of iraq or work on getting the price of gasoline under control. I can't believe what idots are in charge of running this country, has every official been bought off. Approve the merger and get onto issues that really matter.

Oh Great!!!! I just bought service with sirius.

What is the government waiting for?  Exxon - Mobil went through in less time and they affect many millions more consumers than satellite radio.  Congress didn't spend this much time debating whether to go to war in Iraq.  All they are doing is wasting taxpayers money again on lawyers and lobbyists with this delay.

I believe the FCC will allow a merger if only to save the system. We need an

alternative to ground based radio in more remote areas such as the Adarondack

mts it has been a Godsend.

I just paid for 3 years of service on one of my cars. Is that at risk?

I love XM Radio.  It is nice to listen to the news and sports while driving through the middle of nowwhere.

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