DanOregon
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Apr 4, 2007
- Messages
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This is something I found from the East Bay Express from 2002. I don't think things have gotten better. I think he is continuing to purchase operations for the cash flow so he can continue making payments.
News & Notes
If he won a $1 billion jackpot, William Dean Singleton would have enough left for 87 working sculpture fountains.
From staff reports
Published: May 29, 2002
Give a guy some credit: Smells like trouble over at ANG Newspapers, which publishes the Oakland Tribune, Hayward Daily Review, and several other East Bay suburban dailies. According to a report in the Rocky Mountain News, credit-ratings outfit Moody's Investors Service has dealt a blow to ANG's parent company, MediaNews Group, which all told owns nearly fifty daily papers and eighty weeklies. Moody's has downgraded the company's credit rating to "junk" status. The reason? Try $976.4 million in long-term debt. The company now has a debt-to-equity ratio of 41 to 1, which means majority owner William Dean Singleton would have to liquidate all of his company's assets 41 times over to get it out of the red.Over the last fifteen years, Singleton has borrowed nearly $1 billion as he built a newspaper empire stretching across the country. He honed a formula of buying up struggling small-town newspapers for a song, stripping operations to the bone, cutting overheads as much as possible, and waiting for the ledger to roll into the black. But such leveraging is always risky, and if profits drop even incrementally -- say, um, during a brief recession -- the debt payments can become a massive burden. MediaNews' net income slipped to a mere $2.75 million last quarter, an eighty percent drop from six months earlier.
News & Notes
If he won a $1 billion jackpot, William Dean Singleton would have enough left for 87 working sculpture fountains.
From staff reports
Published: May 29, 2002
Give a guy some credit: Smells like trouble over at ANG Newspapers, which publishes the Oakland Tribune, Hayward Daily Review, and several other East Bay suburban dailies. According to a report in the Rocky Mountain News, credit-ratings outfit Moody's Investors Service has dealt a blow to ANG's parent company, MediaNews Group, which all told owns nearly fifty daily papers and eighty weeklies. Moody's has downgraded the company's credit rating to "junk" status. The reason? Try $976.4 million in long-term debt. The company now has a debt-to-equity ratio of 41 to 1, which means majority owner William Dean Singleton would have to liquidate all of his company's assets 41 times over to get it out of the red.Over the last fifteen years, Singleton has borrowed nearly $1 billion as he built a newspaper empire stretching across the country. He honed a formula of buying up struggling small-town newspapers for a song, stripping operations to the bone, cutting overheads as much as possible, and waiting for the ledger to roll into the black. But such leveraging is always risky, and if profits drop even incrementally -- say, um, during a brief recession -- the debt payments can become a massive burden. MediaNews' net income slipped to a mere $2.75 million last quarter, an eighty percent drop from six months earlier.