Advertisement

Deal for TV stations casts shadow on Tribune’s credit rating

Share

Tribune Co. went a full six months with unblemished credit. But its plan to buy 19 television stations is casting a shadow over the media conglomerate’s credit rating.

Standard & Poor’s Corp. said Tuesday that Tribune’s $2.7-billion deal for Local TV Holdings has “negative implications” for its credit.

That’s not a credit downgrade. But it signals an increased risk that Tribune’s BB- rating could be cut.

Advertisement

S&P cited the “meaningful increase in leverage” that Tribune is taking on to fund the Local TV purchase. Tribune will use some of its roughly $550 million in cash. It also will draw heavily on a $4.1 billion credit facility.

Tribune was shorn of most of its debt when it emerged from a four-year stint in bankruptcy late last year. Total debt hit $13 billion following the company’s ill-fated buyout by real-estate magnate Sam Zell in 2007. The debt overhang played a big role in pushing Tribune into bankruptcy protection.

On the bright side, S&P praised the logic of buying the TV stations, saying it will reduce Tribune’s reliance on the precarious newspaper industry and “improve the company’s business position because of the healthier long-term prospects for broadcasting.”

S&P to raised its overall assessment of Tribune’s business prospects to “satisfactory” from “fair.”

ALSO:

Tribune’s $2.7-billion TV deal would accelerate media consolidation

After four years, Tribune Co., parent of L.A. Times, emerges from bankruptcy

Advertisement

Activists outside L.A. Times building protest potential sale of paper to Koch brothers

Follow Walter Hamilton on Twitter @LATwalter

Advertisement