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Audacy completes its financial restructuring and now plans to go private
CNN Business · Costfoto/NurPhoto/Shutterstock

Radio network Audacy on Monday shared that it completed its financial restructuring, successfully reducing its approximately $1.9 billion of funded debt by 80%, to $350 million.

The Philadelphia-based company has seen bottom-line growth, which it said has been accomplished via gains in revenue shares, increased digital revenue growth, audience share gains and expense reductions.

Audacy will continue to be led by its current president and chief executive, David Field, as well as its existing management team.

“Today, Audacy embarks on our next chapter, capitalizing on our position as a scaled, multi-platform audio leader, differentiated by our exclusive, premium audio content, including our unrivaled leadership in sports audio, powered by our industry-leading financial strength and focused on accelerating our innovation and digital transformation,” Field said in a statement.

Audacy shared that it expects to become a private company.

Audacy’s restructuring comes after the FCC’s commissioners approved the assignment of licenses held by the radio giant to a new, post-bankruptcy version of the company on September 18, allowing the radio giant to temporarily bypass the commission’s review.

The radio giant had filed when it disclosed it was entering a restructuring agreement to reduce debt. In February, Bloomberg reported the Soros Fund Management picked up over $400 million of the radio company’s debt, making it the largest contributor among a group of lenders looking to exchange loans for stock.

Audacy’s announcement also comes months after the radio giant approached the FCC in March, requesting a full foreign-ownership review while also asking the commission to delay its review, an FCC spokesperson said. In its request, the radio giant emphasized that it believed about 22% of a new, post-bankruptcy Audacy would be foreign-owned, requesting a review out of an abundance of caution.

Per US broadcast ownership rules, the FCC sets the limit on the number of radio and TV stations an entity can own. The commission is also required to review foreign investments in radio station licenses and has a 25% benchmark for such investments from foreign individuals, governments, and corporations. Foreign investors can acquire up to 100% of a US broadcaster or radio station, but such requests must similarly be approved by the FCC and are not approved if the commission deems foreign ownership goes against the public interest.

Notably, Soros Fund Management, which was created by the Hungarian-born US investor in 1970, is a privately held investment firm chaired by the billionaire. Attacks on Soros have increased in recent years, just as antisemitic attacks have also risen, many of which stem from right-wing influencers, who vocally champion the international strongmen Soros opposes. Soros, who publicly donates to Democratic candidates and liberal causes, is also the founder and major contributor of the Open Society Foundations, which aims to work for justice, democratic governance and human rights.


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