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  1. Demian is offline
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    02-27-2009, 12:12 PM #161
    The bastards are still calling for bankruptcy........****ing unbelievable!!!!

    http://reason.com/news/show/131905.html

    The Satellite Radio Blues
    Why is XM Sirius on the verge of bankruptcy?
    Jesse Walker | February 27, 2009

    America's only mass-market satellite radio broadcaster nearly went bankrupt last week. Only a last-minute infusion of cash from the cable conglomerate Liberty Media saved XM Sirius from Chapter 11, and there's no guarantee the new investment will be enough for the enterprise to survive. Beloved by listeners and feared by its earthbound competitors, satellite radio offers far more variety than can be found on the AM and FM dials, with hundred of channels offering everything from bluegrass to C-Span to a 24-hour hair metal feed. But that might not be enough to keep the company alive.

    Part of the problem, naturally, is the recession. XM Sirius isn't just trying to expand its audience at a time when consumers are spending less. It's bundling its product with new cars at a time when the auto industry is on the verge of collapse. So it's bound to be hurting right now no matter what the long-term radio trends might be.

    But there are other factors in play as well, two of which deserve special attention.

    The government. In 1997, when the Federal Communications Commission started taking bids for the right to run a satellite radio service, it auctioned off only two licenses. This wasn't because there were just two firms that wanted to try their hands at satellite broadcasting. In addition to the enterprises that eventually became known as XM and Sirius, two more businesses made bids: the Digital Satellite Broadcasting Corporation and Primosphere. But the FCC, playing its role as the zoning board of the ether, decided to allocate only enough space for two companies to compete. So only two groups of people with two business plans were able to try their hands at the medium.

    Would another company have succeeded where XM and Sirius are failing? I don't know. The FCC didn't know either when it shut off the spectrum to other entrants. The only way we could know is if those additional broadcasters were allowed to try.

    When it became clear that Sirius and XM weren't going to be able to make it on their own, the two firms decided to merge. That gave the government another chance to stand in the way: It took the Federal Trade Commission 13 months to approve the deal, and then the FCC dragged its feet for another four months before blessing the combination. By the time XM and Sirius had permission to marry, the country was seven months into the recession.

    The Internet. The government intially approved the idea of licensing satellite radio companies in 1992, five years before it auctioned off the licenses and nine years before the broadcasts began. The technology existed to create such a service even earlier. The delay cost the medium dearly: Satellite radio is a Cable Age technology that didn't launch until the Internet era.

    I don't mean it literally runs through cables, of course. I mean it resembles the revolution achieved by cable TV in the '80s much more than the current changes sweeping in via the Web. Satellite radio allows many more media options, but the number of channels it offers is still much smaller than the number of audio sites on the Net. While it increases the number of producers, it does little to break down the boundaries between producer and consumer. And it lets a company with a government franchise make the key editorial decisions. If anything, satellite radio marks a slight step back from cable. If pay TV followed the satellite model, your cable company would own virtually all the channels it offers—and there would be no public access stations in the lineup.

    Compared to the broadcasting system that preceded the Cable Age, such a setup meant a sharp rise in consumer choices. Compared to the online world, it seems centralized, inflexible, and closed off to audience participation. The XM and Sirius lineups are wildly diverse when contrasted with the wares on the AM and FM bands, but there's even more available on all those webstreams and podcasts and audioblogs—everything from a Czech country station to an outlet devoted entirely to bellydancing music. Put together, those tiny operations are building a big audience: Internet radio listening has been growing steadily for the last few years, despite some crippling regulatory barriers imposed by the Copyright Office.

    And that's not all the disenchanted radio fan can find on the Web. There's also Internet downloading, both legal and illegal, and the ability to play DJ by sharing playlists with your friends. (The iPod now occupies the social space once held by the portable transistor radio.) More than on any other electronic medium, experiences on the Web can be both personalized and shared. Internet access is increasingly portable as well, eroding the last substantial advantage held by traditional (and satellite) commercial broadcasters.

    Listeners aren't failing to adopt satellite radio because they prefer AM and FM. After all, terrestrial radio has been suffering too. They're failing to adopt satellite radio because there's even more variety available on their computers. One revolution has outpaced the other.

    Managing Editor Jesse Walker is the author of Rebels on the Air: An Alternative History of Radio in America (NYU Press).

  2. Demian is offline
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    02-27-2009, 12:17 PM #162
    The bastards at The Motley Fool are also chiming in with the "on the verge of bankruptcy" crap! Is this the short seller's talking point for the day?

    http://www.fool.com/investing/genera...-to-avoid.aspx

    5 Media Stocks to Avoid
    By Jennifer Schonberger
    February 27, 2009

    Still there are others with internal operating problems. Sirius XM Radio (Nasdaq: SIRI) has had issues in the past, and this credit crisis has simply accelerated the company into its current troubles. Now it's up to John Malone's Liberty Media (Nasdaq: LCAPA) to save the company, which is on the verge of bankruptcy, through taking an ownership stake.

  3. Keysmark is offline
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    02-27-2009, 12:23 PM #163
    Demian,

    You are overwhelming me with too much gloom & doom for one day!

    Here is something positive: SIRI JUST TURNED GREEN!

  4. Demian is offline
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    02-27-2009, 12:26 PM #164
    I don't write these crap articles - I only report on the Sirius/XM news flow....

    I am bullish on the stock....

  5. Demian is offline
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    02-27-2009, 12:29 PM #165
    http://www.tuaw.com/2009/02/27/starp...-by-app-store/

    StarPlayr bounced by App Store
    by Mel Martin on Feb 27th 2009

    .........It may be that Sirius/XM has problems with a third party player, or AT&T may have bandwidth issues. The app was delivered to Apple for review January 31st.

    The Starplayr team remains optimistic, and says they will do whatever they have to do to get the app to the iPhone..........

  6. Demian is offline
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    02-27-2009, 12:35 PM #166
    What do you expect from the "voice of the broadcasting industry" propaganda machine?

    http://www.rbr.com/media-news/13114.html

    No serious plans for Sirius DirecTV bundle
    26 February, 2009 10:22:00

    At least not yet – that’s the word from Liberty Media Corporation CEO Greg Maffei, who sees his company’s $530M loan to the debt-challenged Sirius XM satellite radio operation as a good investment. But bundling the two “down the road” has not been ruled out. First and foremost will be leveraging cost savings by getting better deals with automobile companies, program suppliers and talent – made possible by lack of a satellite radio competitor. There would also be immediate cross-promotional benefits.

    RBR/TVBR observation: A key argument against allowing XM and Sirius to merge, indeed to allow any sole suppliers of a good or service to merge, is giving the merged entity unfair market power. In this case, the losers will be programmers, artists, and eventually, consumers. Basically, Maffei knows a monopoly when he sees one and knows what to do with it. However, there are other problems with the Sirius XM business model, and this economy is not a good one for convincing people to part with a monthly fee when they can get traditional radio for free. The jury is still out on this.

  7. Demian is offline
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    02-27-2009, 12:37 PM #167
    SIRI continues to find support at it's 50 DMA......

    http://stockcharts.com/h-sc/ui?s=SIR...d=p89775725136

  8. Keysmark is offline
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    02-27-2009, 12:50 PM #168
    Quote Originally Posted by Demian View Post
    I don't write these crap articles - I only report on the Sirius/XM news flow....

    I am bullish on the stock....
    Come on Demian, don't get too serious on me! I'm only giving you a bit of a hard time.

    Don't forget that I was your biggest supporter back when you were the only voice trying to get people to post in these threads.

    Keysmark

  9. Demian is offline
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    02-27-2009, 12:50 PM #169
    Could another extension from the NASDAQ be coming?

    http://www.foxbusiness.com/story/mar...ne-1821531366/

    NYSE Suspends $1 Listing Rule Until June 30

    NEW YORK--The New York Stock Exchange will suspend share price and market capitalization rules for its listed companies until June 30 to deal with the deepening market sell-off, parent company NYSE Euronext said Thursday.

    For the first time, the Big Board will suspend its requirement that companies keep their shares above $1 or face delisting. The market operator said it will also extend a temporary lowering of its market capitalization standard, which it introduced last month to stem a growing tide of delistings.

    The changes are effective immediately, but still subject to approval by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Reuters reported on Feb. 24 that the NYSE was in talks with regulators on the $1 rule.

    "The overall market downturn has only deepened ... causing an even larger number of stocks to fall below our requirements," Scott Cutler, the company's head of listings, said in a statement.

    "We are taking proactive measures to ensure that the stocks of NYSE-listed companies can remain listed in the current difficult market conditions, enabling them to be available to the investing public during this period."

    The required market cap is temporarily $15 million, down from the usual $25 million. Previously, companies whose shares fell below $1 for 30 days, on average, received a letter warning they faced delisting after a six-month grace period.

    The NYSE said the shares of more than 50 companies that had fallen below $1 would immediately benefit from the rule change. It said nearly 500 companies had fallen below $5.

    The exchange has delisted nine companies so far this year for falling below one of several listing requirements. It delisted 54 last year.

  10. Demian is offline
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    02-27-2009, 12:54 PM #170
    Quote Originally Posted by Keysmark View Post
    Come on Demian, don't get too serious on me! I'm only giving you a bit of a hard time.

    Don't forget that I was your biggest supporter back when you were the only voice trying to get people to post in these threads.

    Keysmark
    I remember......for a time there, we were like the only 2 people posting on this thread.

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