Please post links with articles..........here is the link for that one.
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/17/bu.../17sorkin.html
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Please post links with articles..........here is the link for that one.
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/17/bu.../17sorkin.html
Tomorrow should be interesting. Good luck everyone!
I was watching the twitter ticker and its funny how different people can perceive the same situation.
Here is the quote:
"I love that Libery Media can't afford to pay Tom Glavine an extra million, but they have half a billion sitting around for Sirius/XM."
I think it might be the best article yet.
yeah every subsequent article adds
one or two more items to fill in the blanks
Notice the statements in bold...........this is professional journalism?
http://www.dealerscope.com/article/l...-403274_1.html
Liberty Media Near Deal
Stephen Silver
Feb 17, 2009
Sirius XM Radio is close to a deal with Liberty Media under which the DirecTV owner will invest in the firm in exchange for a large stake, the Wall Street Journal reported late Monday.
The deal would allow Sirius to escape bankruptcy, which numerous media reports expected to happen Tuesday.
Under the terms of the proposed deal, Liberty would invest hundreds of millions of dollars, and eventually control about half of Sirius.
Can someone please post the new article on Mel from the WSJ homepage? Subscription is required....
Gracias!
"to be his white knight and agree to invest hundreds of millions of dollars in the company in exchange for several board seats and a minority stake, according to people involved in the negotiations"
---------------------------------------------------------nytimes article
This makes it sound to me as if there will not be major dilution
What do you expect from the "voice of the broadcasting industry"......
http://www.rbr.com/radio/12931.html
Today is D-Day for Sirius XM; Rescue or bankruptcy?
16 February, 2009 03:46:00
This is truly going down to the wire. $175 million of bonds come due today (Tuesday, 2/17) and Sirius XM has already said it may file Chapter 11, as soon as today, if it can’t cut a deal to restructure its finances. Late Monday the Wall Street Journal reported that Sirius XM was close to a deal to have John Malone's Liberty Media make an investment so the bonds due today can be paid off -- and that a deal could be announced before the stock markets open this morning.
There's also a new twist: According to both the Wall Street Journal and Bloomberg, major creditors may try to force Mel Karmazin out if Sirius XM seeks Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. So, we wait to see if the Zen Master cuts a deal with either Charlie Ergen or John Malone to avoid having to head to bankruptcy court tomorrow.
Even if Sirius XM does end up in bankruptcy court, it is no slam dunk that the creditors would be able to force Karmazin out. The whole purpose of Chapter 11 protection from creditors for a company to reorganize is to give management some breathing room to straighten out the financial structure. Creditors would face an uphill fight to convince a federal bankruptcy judge that management should be tossed out and replaced with a court-appointed trustee.
Why do the creditors want Karmazin out? The attorney speaking for the creditors told both news outlets that his clients don’t think Chapter 11 is in the best interests of the company. It appears that the only other options were taking the offer from Charlie Ergen at EchoStar, or putting together an alternative with John Malone of Liberty Media. Since the only sure offer on the table was from Ergen, it appears the creditors preferred that as the best protection for their claims.
The attorney also warned against a “precipitous bankruptcy filing.” The February 17th deadline has been well known for some time, and talks to deal with it have been going on for some time, so it is hard to see how anyone could characterize such an action as “precipitous.”
RBR/TVBR observation: If not Mel, who? We wonder, just who would the creditors bring in to run a company that has never done anything but burn cash? We’ve said from the beginning that subscription satellite radio is simply not a viable business. No one has yet proved us wrong.