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If Sirius has to be sold, who will buy?

Posted Apr 03 2008, 02:45 PM by Douglas McIntyre
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When the Justice Department cleared the merger of Sirius with XM Satellite there was anticipation that once the deal got done the shares of both companies would go up. A year ago, the combination was viewed as a dream deal.

If anything, the shares have dropped. Sirius is below $3 and XM is below $13. The market began to realize that the year wasted on getting government approval was a year the companies need to stay competitive. XM has over $1 billion in debt. Refinancing it in the current market would be nearly impossible. Selling shares would lead to extremely large dilution.  As we recently noted, Goldman Sachs even put Sirius on its "Conviction Sell List" with a price target of $2.25.

Growth at Sirius has slowed considerably. In the fourth quarter revenue rose only 29% to $250 million. But, for the full year, revenue was up 45%. Subscriber deactivations in the fourth quarter were almost 540,000 compared to 330,000 in the same quarter of 2006. The firm's net loss was $166 million. Long-term debt was almost $1.3 billion.

The market is also concerned that combining the two companies may not lead to big cost savings, at least not initially. Sirius and XM run on separate satellite platforms. As The Wall Street Journal points out, "The companies' combined 17 million subscribers have radios that aren't interoperable. Radios that can receive signals from both companies likely wouldn't be available for at least a year after the merger - and a year or two after that for customers who get satellite radios via new car purchases."

Sirius and XM also face competition which didn't exist when they started. Near the top of that list are HD radio, the Apple iPhone, and a host of cellphones that download and play music.

If the new company does run into debt service problems and needs to find a buyer, the cost of the common shares is likely to be over $4 billion, unless the situation gets extremely bad. The debt of the two operations taken together is well over $2.2 billion.

The most appropriate buyer for the satellite radio company would be Clear Channel, which has over 700 radio stations.  The odds that regulators would allow a de facto monopoly in the radio business puts the chances of this at is close to zero.

Since the car companies are the major conduit for satellite radio sales one of them might buy the firm to keep it operating. With market caps of under $15 billion, GM and Ford aren't candidates. With a $161 billion market cap, Toyota could swing a deal. But,the U.S. car companies might raise a stink about their largest competitor providing the service. It is just the kind of thing that Congress likes to hold hearings over.

There is a theory -- a weak one -- that one of the telecom companies, probably Verizon or AT&T would want to own a satellite radio company to offer another service to bundle with cellular, broadband, TV, and landlines. The larges cable companies, Comcast and Time Warner Cable would have a similar incentive. Sirius and XM should have over 20 million subscribers by the end of this year. But, the analysis of how many of those customers could be "cross sold" bundled services probably would not justify the cost of an acquisition.

In the end, that leaves the satellite TV firms, Dish Network and DirecTV. DirecTV has the larger market cap at $29 billion. That makes it a more likely buyer. The company has 17 million customers and 1,800 digital audio and video channels. DirectTV had $617 million in operating income in the fourth quarter of last year. John Malone's Liberty Media Corp owns 470 million share of DTV. That would make Malone the key to any decision. DirecTV knows that programming and technical aspects of satellite-delivered content as well as any company.

There may be no logical home for Sirius, and that may be why the shares trade so low.

Comments

 

Does Sirus have the ability to stream line video, example pay per view to moving vehicles and or handheld satilite radios with the addition of international cell phone service as well as video downloads all in one! The i-phone and others are already presenting the technology through the controlled internet, via U-tube and i-tunes. Combined satilite companies of XFM & Sirus have only to compete with Satilite TV; why not Viacom/Blockbuster owning this service in the future?

Content, content, content.  Imagine SIRI when the EIB Network signs up.  

hello ts le monde

do you thing we have siri back ............

As a Ford employee and salesman. I can say yes, there is a video service provided by SIRIUS as well. As to the extent I cannot personally say, but every customer I sell a new car to that has SIRIUS in it is pleased with the radio. I have yet to sell a video based SIRIUS unit but I do know they exist as an option.

sirius offers very limited video streaming.  disney channel and nickelodeon.  future tv stations are to be implemented when demand increases...

Wow let clear channel buy? It just shows that those deep pockets have gone long and far! Its criminal. If clear channel ever aquired sirius I would no longer subsribe, I strongly support a class action law suit against both the fcc and clear channel, these two have been playing unfair and not following the rules for a long time and its tiime someone put this bully in its place.

What would this merger do for the Sirius stock?

I think that Clear Channel or one of the wireless Telecom companies should buy it ! I would support either one, Clear Channel has the right like any other company to buy up and own what it wants and long as you are willing to pay the price and take on the debt or whatever comes with it !  That is Free Enterprise !  

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