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MAY 8, 2006
Tribune's Tribulations Will Tribune (TRB) go on the block next? Some pros are betting on it. Like most other newspaper stocks, Tribune has been beaten to a pulp on poor earnings caused by a slump in ads and readership. Its stock is down 25% in the past year, hitting 27 on Apr. 5. It now languishes at 27.87. Of 19 analysts who follow the stock, 16 are down on it. But Lawrence Haverty of Gabelli Global Multimedia Trust (GGT
), which owns shares, sees Tribune as takeover bait. It is "extremely cheap" based on its assets, including the Los Angeles Times, New York Newsday, Chicago Tribune, 26 TV stations, a radio station, and the Chicago Cubs. "With its assets valued at wastebasket prices, Tribune will attract a buyer," says Haverty. Analyst Barry Lucas of Gabelli puts Tribune's intrinsic worth at $13.2 billion, or $40 a share. Haverty expects its "unhappy shareholders to band together and seek changes -- as they did at Knight Ridder (KRI
)," which has agreed to be taken over by McClatchy Newspapers (MNI
). The Robert R. McCormick Tribune Foundation owns 14% of the company and Chandler Trust 12%. Tribune has little debt, notes Haverty, and trades below peers, based on price-earnings and price-to-cash flow ratios. He says Tribune will earn $2 a share in 2006 and $2.20 in 2007, vs. 2005's $2.08. James Peters of Standard & Poor's (MHP
) sees Tribune continuing to reduce costs and move resources to growth areas, such as the Net. It's encouraging, he says, that Tribune plans to derive 12% of its ad publishing revenues online in three years, up from 6% now. Peters rates Tribune a "buy." A Tribune spokesman declined comment on buyout talk.
Note: Unless otherwise noted, neither the sources cited in Inside Wall Street nor their firms hold positions in the stocks under discussion. Similarly, they have no investment banking or other financial relationships with them. By Gene G. Marcial
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