Sirius Could File For Bankruptcy As Early As Tuesday

digg Share this on Facebook Huffpost - stumble reddit del.ico.us RSS

DEBORAH YAO | February 13, 2009 05:36 PM EST | AP

Compare other versions »
I Like ItI Don’t Like It

Financially strapped Sirius XM Radio Inc. said Friday that it could file for bankruptcy as early as Tuesday if it cannot successfully negotiate with the holders of its debt.

While the satellite radio company said it has exchanged $172.5 million of debt maturing in December for new debt due in 2011, it still has about $175 million coming due this Sunday.

Sirius is fighting against attempts for control by Charlie Ergen, the chief executive of Dish Network Corp. and sister company EchoStar Corp. Ergen bought much of a $300 million batch of discounted Sirius bonds that come due next week. Sirius had rejected a previous offer by Ergen for control of the company.

A bankruptcy filing for Sirius would give it the right to terminate contracts with on-air talent, such as Martha Stewart and Howard Stern, who has a five-year, $500 million deal. A Chapter 11 filing also could crimp Sirius' growth because subscribers might shy away from a company in bankruptcy. Sirius has nearly 20 million listeners and provides a wide range of music, sports and talk radio.

Liberty Media Corp. is in talks with Sirius about possibly investing in the company, a move that could fend off Ergen.

But the DirecTV Group Inc., a Dish rival controlled by Liberty Chairman John Malone, is not involved in the negotiations, according to a person close to the situation. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because he is not authorized to talk about the negotiations. Liberty's participation in the talks was reported earlier by The Wall Street Journal.

Analysts said they didn't think DirecTV would want a satellite radio business or its satellites. DirecTV, the nation's largest satellite TV company, has launched new satellites and is focusing on enhancing its TV service.

Sirius and Liberty declined to comment.

Story continues below
advertisement

The struggle over Sirius brings together three strong personalities: Malone, Ergen and Sirius CEO Mel Karmazin.

It also renews the adversarial relationship between Karmazin and Ergen. In 2004, when Karmazin was head of Viacom Inc. and in a dispute with Ergen over the fees Dish had to pay to carry Viacom channels, Dish published Karmazin's home number and told subscribers to call him.

This time, Karmazin is in a much weaker position, with Sirius' debt coming due that the company is not in good shape to repay. In total, Sirius has about $3.3 billion in debt maturing between now and 2014.

Given time, Sirius' purchase of rival XM last year could have led Sirius out of its troubles. The merged company became the only satellite radio provider in the country. By eliminating duplicated operations, it was able to cut costs deeply.

Karmazin's plans were foiled by a tight credit market that made refinancing difficult, and plunging sales of autos, its main distribution channel. Karmazin started to swap some debt maturing Sunday with equity, with limited success.

Ergen swept in and bought much of the debt, putting Karmazin in a tough position. Liberty then came into the picture as a possible lifeline.

On Friday, Sirius made some strides with part of its debt due in December. It swapped a portion of the 10 percent convertible senior notes due this year for senior secured notes due 2011. In return, debt holders will get an annualized 10 percent interest in cash, plus 2 percent in kind in 2010 and 4 percent in 2011. They also received a fee of $9.45 million, of which $5.1 million was paid in cash and the rest in Sirius common shares at 7.4 cents each.

Shares of Sirius were up 3.1 cents, or 42 percent, to 10.5 cents in afternoon trading.

Financially strapped Sirius XM Radio Inc. said Friday that it could file for bankruptcy as early as Tuesday if it cannot successfully negotiate with the holders of its debt. While the satellite radio...
Financially strapped Sirius XM Radio Inc. said Friday that it could file for bankruptcy as early as Tuesday if it cannot successfully negotiate with the holders of its debt. While the satellite radio...
 
Comments
106
Pending Comments
0
iPhone App Promo

Want to reply to a comment? Hint: Click "Reply" at the bottom of the comment; after being approved your comment will appear directly underneath the comment you replied to

View Comments:
Page: 1 2 3 4 Next › Last » (4 pages total)
- FdeBear I'm a Fan of FdeBear 50 fans permalink

Man,I love XM. I've got a receiver in the car - great for traveling, a boombox at home and I own hand portable which I love. What enticed me was progressive talk and the music. Potus was real handy during the election. I could turn down the jibberjabber on the TV and enjoy my own soundtrack - otherwise I'm into C-Span. I wasn't that fond of Sirius' programming (which was the first unit I purchased), I like Opy and Anthony (uncut) better than Howard Stern. I can get Sirius's music on Dish. I hope XM doesn't fold. I have it on all the time and never had a problem with customer service. I really hope it can survive.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:08 AM on 02/17/2009
- Ozarks I'm a Fan of Ozarks 43 fans permalink
photo

Another Media monopoly probably to bit the dust.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:23 AM on 02/16/2009
photo

Perhaps that outrageous pay deal with Stern contributed to the downfall?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:37 PM on 02/15/2009
- booker52 I'm a Fan of booker52 24 fans permalink
photo

I live in an area where the free radio choices are limited, so XM or Sirus are the way to go. Great when traveling as well. I would be hurting for entertainment if this folded.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:05 PM on 02/15/2009

I use a portable Pioneer XM receiver. It also has a recorder and mp3 player ( 500MB). I got all my Alan Watts lectures on it.
I also listen to it at home and while jogging. When the signal is iffy, I switch to to the recordings.
Hope they stay in business.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:43 PM on 02/15/2009
- FdeBear I'm a Fan of FdeBear 50 fans permalink

Love my Pioneer receiver too. I get a good signal and I can store a lot of my Audiobooks on it. Commercial radio I can not stand. It's just useful for local news in my case.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:28 AM on 02/17/2009

I have three XM subscriptions, so I love it, too, but their customer service is horrendous. I was on the fence about dropping two of my subscriptions, but the fact that XM, after March, will no longer allow subscribers to listen free from the internet, has pushed me over. I am SO done with them! I don't like free radio, I hate listening to the commercials, but these people and their nickel and diming is ridiculous.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:09 PM on 02/15/2009
- LoveAlaska I'm a Fan of LoveAlaska 4 fans permalink

I agree, I also have three XM subscriptions. Their customer service just slays me. It is frustrating and you need to constantly check your bill to be sure you aren't getting overbilled - I was for a year.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:04 PM on 02/16/2009

There is always shortband, lots of interesting stuff on that.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:38 PM on 02/15/2009

Glad I didn't get that lifetime subscription.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:29 AM on 02/15/2009
- FdeBear I'm a Fan of FdeBear 50 fans permalink

I sure was thinking about it too. Best to hold off until we see what's going to happen.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:30 AM on 02/17/2009
- Indie2008 I'm a Fan of Indie2008 44 fans permalink

Oh no! Now we'll have to listen to FREE radio, when we're not watching TV, surfing the Internet, twittering, or listening to our Ipods.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:19 AM on 02/15/2009
- FairTalk I'm a Fan of FairTalk 18 fans permalink
photo

I support local free radio.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:32 PM on 02/14/2009

Support by listening to commercials every 10 minutes. Enjoy.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:03 AM on 02/15/2009
- skybar I'm a Fan of skybar 12 fans permalink

I would support local free radio if it didn't suck so hard.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:46 PM on 02/15/2009
- judiNJ I'm a Fan of judiNJ 52 fans permalink
photo

It isn't local anymore. Hasn't been for years. That is what happened when they killed the Fairness Doctrine. Now only a few large corporations own all the airways.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:28 PM on 02/15/2009
- lpeggy I'm a Fan of lpeggy 2 fans permalink

call me silly, but I listen to over 4 thousand songs on my iPod and use it in the car with a 60 dollar adapter that makes it come out my car speakers, presto...all the music I like, when I like, and in what order I like. And no monthly fee. :-)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:18 PM on 02/14/2009

How much does it cost to buy all those songs?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:11 PM on 02/14/2009
- olderdem I'm a Fan of olderdem 9 fans permalink

Probably stole them.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:27 AM on 02/15/2009
photo

Yet another domino in the economic slowdown..­...."hmmm, let me think: I've lost my job, I'm eating the dollar menu at MickieD's.­....should I renew my satellite radio? Maybe not".

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:50 PM on 02/14/2009

Most people do not spend enough time in their cars to justify paying for satellite radio for the car.
It would be nice to get a good variety of radio stations at home, though. But I'm not willing to pay $10 or $12 a month for that. Radio should be free.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:34 PM on 02/14/2009

Satellite radio morphed into a sort of SONY Betamax of the 21st century...something that might offer better quality but just wasn't important enough for the general public to go out and buy new equipment and then pay a monthy fee to have listen.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:09 PM on 02/14/2009

Satellite radio is just misunderstood. Betamax had more going against it than that.

You can see it in this thread here: "Oh, it's just like regular radio except it costs money".

It's NOTHING like regular radio.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:56 PM on 02/15/2009
- aznurse I'm a Fan of aznurse 50 fans permalink

this is all my fault.
I signed up last week!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:10 PM on 02/14/2009
- sej100 I'm a Fan of sej100 27 fans permalink

Love satellite radio and its diverse content.
Free air radio has become purely junk and awful today.

The conservatives are hoping this will fail and are probably helping CEO's to destroy radio.

Notice they hate the concept of Fairness. They Take a free license and manipulate it into all conservative propaganda indicating they make a profit. UNTRUE. They just buy up the stations with other voices have them canceled to avoid competition and to keep the propaganda going.

Rachel Maddow is a prime example of success.
Free air waves require some national interest. Having ONLY one propaganda scheme going is not in the national interest. And it is not an infringement of free speech to require diversity in programming.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:28 PM on 02/14/2009

Any company that gives someone like Howard Stern 500 million deserves to go down the toilet.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:25 PM on 02/14/2009
photo

Sirius is another example of a company with a terrific idea being run into the ground by corporate fools. Its management focused too much on the locking up big name talent and expanding content, and neglected to develop better hardware and technology. The radios and receivers themselves are flimsy, short-lived, and unreliable. Just hold one in your hand and you can immediately feel how poorly constructed they are. To think that about 3 years ago, Mel Karmazin had a chance at a deal with Apple to develop technology that would allow the Sirius signal to be picked up by iPod and iPhone, and instead he rejected the deal and chose to put out the Sirius Stiletto which is about as substantial as a plastic cigarette lighter. Sirius's programming might be lights out, but that's because it's the only part of its product it cared about.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:10 PM on 02/14/2009

THat is the biggest thing I was hoping would come of this merger.

XM always had radios built like a rock that could take anything--but the stations stunk.
Sirius always had by FAR the best stations--but the radios were nothing but a headache. I only had one that made it over a year.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:58 PM on 02/15/2009
photo

I totally agree. I went through three of them and finally got disgusted, I can't even find the stiletto anywhere. I love Howard, have been a listener for 15 years, but it's been torture to HEAR him.
That stated, Obama's FCC must overturn the Bush years of monopolistic strangleholds on terrestrial radio and the mitigating absence of The Fairness Doctrine.
Even sports talk radio is all corporate, even in LA where the market is saturated with local personalities who cannot get onto the airwaves. Imagine Mychal Thompson who actually played in the NBA for the Lakers and knows his basketball, having to be shuffled aside for the likes of Chris Meyers.
Personally I think Howard should just have his own station and his own stockholders. He'd be the Green Bay Packers of morning radio shows!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:13 PM on 02/16/2009
Page: 1 2 3 4 Next › Last » (4 pages total)
Comments are closed for this entry

 You must be logged in to comment. Log in  or connect with 

Connect