Tribune Company Facing Bankruptcy

The Tribune Company’s debt coupled with the collapsing advertising market for newspapers may force the company into bankruptcy. Dealbook is reporting that the company has hired Lazard and Sidley Austin for legal advice in a potential bankruptcy filing.

Dealbook:  While Tribune must contend with hefty interest payments over the next year, its most pressing problem is a maintenance covenant on some of its debt that limits the company’s borrowings to no more than nine times earnings before interest, depreciation and amortization.

Even if the company continues to make interest payments, failure to maintain that level of debt means technical default — which does not always lead to a bankruptcy filing. Other newspaper publishers have halted making interest payments on their debt, but have yet to file.

Tribune has sought to ameliorate its woes by selling off assets like the Chicago Cubs, the company still faces a looming debt crunch. Tribune hired Lazard several weeks ago to assess its options, these people said. Sidley Austin is a longtime outside adviser to Tribune, and it has a well-respected bankruptcy practice as well.

See Also: Painful $2 Billion Drop In Newspaper Ad Revenue
Magazines Lose A Billion In Ad Sales
Wall Street Journal Managing Editor: Advertisers See Newspapers As A Safe Harbor

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