U.S. broadcasters in line for political ad windfall
Send a link to a friend
[August 10, 2018]
By Sinéad Carew
(Reuters) - Local TV companies such as
Sinclair Broadcast Group <SBGI.O> and Gray Television <GTN.N> are set
for a significant political advertising boost this year as candidates
and special interest groups are spending heavily to woo voters in
mid-term elections.
Demand for commercial airtime is particularly strong ahead of elections
for one third of the U.S. Senate seats, and all 435 House of
Representatives seats as well as positions such as state governorships,
because U.S. President Donald Trump's Republican party is fighting to
keep its majority in both houses of Congress while Democrats are
battling to turn the tables.
Politicians and their supporters from both political parties are looking
to win voters with their stances on hot button issues such as gun
control and abortion rights.
"There's a lot of excitement and probably a lot of paranoia and a lot of
fear, and those things drive political dollars," Kevin Latek, chief
legal and development officer at Gray Television, told investors on
Tuesday, according to a conference call transcript.
Gray posted second-quarter political ad revenue of $18.1 million, 20
percent above the high end of its forecast and 9 percent above the same
quarter in 2014, the last mid-term election year. Political ads brought
about 7 percent of total second-quarter revenue at Gray, which forecast
a third-quarter range of $41 million to $45 million for the segment
versus $41 million in 2014.
After reporting bumper second-quarter political revenue on Wednesday,
Sinclair raised its 2018 target for the segment to $160 million from a
range of $140 million to $150 million. The new target would be 5.8
percent of total revenue, according to analyst estimates compiled by
Thomson Reuters data.
Of course the momentum could change as 80 percent of political ad
spending typically occurs between the start of September and election
day, which is Nov. 6 this year. But analysts are hopeful the early
strength will continue.
"It looks like its going to be a record year even without a Presidential
race," said Daniel Kurnos an analyst covering broadcasters at Benchmark
Company.
For 2018, political advertising could generate $2.4 billion revenue for
local broadcasters compared with $2.1 billion in 2014, according to
Kantar Media CMAG unit's latest forecast issued in 2017. Steven
Passwaiter, vice president and general manager at CMAG, said he aims to
update the estimate this month.
The 2016 U.S. presidential election generated $2.85 billion for local
broadcasters, according to Passwaiter. The presidential race tends to
attract more advertising dollars than local mid-term battles but 2016
spending was much weaker than expected as Trump relied far more on free
media than past candidates. (https://reut.rs/2M8IPNw)
[to top of second column] |
A trader works on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange shortly
after the opening bell in New York, U.S., July 31, 2018.
REUTERS/Lucas Jackson
That disappointment, which pummeled broadcasters shares in 2016, is fuelling
hopes that forecasts are more solid this year.
"Everybody got burned two years ago because the presidential spend turned out to
be a dud. I think these guys are going to be incredibly careful not to raise
expectations to disappoint the street again," said Passwaiter.
Gray Television shares rose 14.8 percent in the two sessions after its Aug. 7
quarterly report. In 2016, the stock fell 24.7 percent from June to October.
Sinclair's shares rose 4 percent on Wednesday after its report, although
enthusiasm was dampened by the collapse of its effort to buy Tribune Media <TRCO.N>.Sinclair
stock fell 20.6 percent from June to October in 2016.
Another local broadcaster E.W. Scripps <SSP.O>, rose 5.7 percent after it
reported results on Aug. 3 including political ad revenue of $14.9 million,
compared with $7 million pro forma political revenue in the 2014 quarter.
Political brought 5.3 percent of its total second-quarter revenue.
Investors are careful about making bets on political revenue for broadcasters as
it only shows up every two years, before elections and is unpredictable.
The amount a broadcaster generates varies a lot in election years as it depends
on how many of their stations serve battleground states where campaigns spend
heavily in a particular year for reasons such as close polls.
Also, strong demand for political commercials tends to eat into core advertising
revenue from clients like carmakers as broadcasters only have a finite number of
timeslots, said Leo Kulp, analyst at RBC Capital Management.
But even if broadcasters can't bank on future political windfalls, a strong
season is still a big positive, according to Kulp.
"What it does is help generate incremental free cash flow. It's going to
translate to the companies deleveraging more and giving them more capacity to do
M&A," he said.
(Reporting By Sinéad Carew; Editing by Susan Thomas)
[© 2018 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2018 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |