This is a discussion on Is it all over for Worldspace? within the News and Views from the Business World forums, part of the News and views category; Troubled satellite radio broadcaster Worldspace is seemingly out of cash. Sources within the company say senior staff have already forfeited ...
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| Bronze Member Join Date: Feb 2007 Location: Cochin
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Rep Power: 2 | Troubled satellite radio broadcaster Worldspace is seemingly out of cash. Sources within the company say senior staff have already forfeited at least two salary payments, and this coming Tuesday’s payroll will again evidently have problems. Another source says that CEO Noah Samara last week held an all-staff meeting, telling them: “We just need funding and execution.” One source stated that he has been repeating much the same mantra for more than eight years. Worldspace, for what seems the umpteenth time, is again talking to its bridging debt-holders about rolling over its repayment obligations to them, this time until July 31. The original binding “Mandatory Redemption Date” for the debt was May 31, then June 30, then July 9, all of which were missed. But it is now paying a crippling rate of interest for missing its repayment obligations. Bit by bit Worldspace’s debt-holders are winning large chunks of Worldspace because of its default in repaying the assorted loan-notes. However, Nasdaq rules limit the amount of debt and warrants that Worldspace can convert into shares to a total of 19.9% of the firm’s issued Class A shares unless approval is given by the company’s shareholders. Hence Worldspace has to call a special meeting to be held no later than August 15 to approve the move. The loans were sourced from Highbridge Capital Management (through Highbridge Int’l LLC); OZ Management (through OZ Master Fund), Angelo, Gordon & Co (through AG Offshore Convertables) and Citadel Limited Partnership (through its Citadel Equity Fund). Back in early June, in a formal statement, Worldspace said: “This agreement gives the Company time to bring in the funds already committed to it and to raise new funding.” On April 5 its auditors expressed formally their concern as to Worldspace’s financial status, and this despite numerous promises and commitments made by Noah Samara about fresh injections of capital. On January 2 Samara, in a formal SEC statement said he had secured $40m in fresh funding – from himself, or at least in the shape of a injection of $40m from Yenura Pte Ltd, a company controlled by Mr Samara, which had placed $40m of subordinated financing into WorldSpace, “effective immediately”. We’ll have to wait for this past quarter-year’s financials to see how much of that cash ever arrived into Worldspace’s depleted coffers. Worldspace’s debt is now large – and growing by the day. Worldspace’s SEC statement of July 10 said “the aggregate outstanding principal amount of the Bridge Notes is $36,145,361. (ii) the aggregate outstanding principal amount of the Convertible Notes is $53,149,779., and (ii) the Company is unconditionally indebted and liable for the repayment in full of the outstanding amount of all obligations under the WorldSpace Notes, without offset, defense or counterclaim of any kind, nature or description.” Worldspace has also signed to pay interest rates to the note-holders, of 11.18% for the period to July 9, and a heavyweight 15% from the default date. What are Worldspace’s assets? A couple of tired satellites and a partly-built ground-spare that needs cash spent on it to ready it for launch (and a launch/insurance bill to get it into orbit). A sale & leaseback deal was under consideration last year, but came to nothing and now in these even more troubled times the prospects are even worse. The company also has licences in places like Germany and Italy, and its over-arching satellite L-band licences but it is seemingly without the cash to bring European services to market. A larger question in the event of some sort of liquidation or transfer of assets is what might happen to its joint-venture operations in places like Italy (with Class Editori). Meanwhile, founder, president, chairman and CEO at Worldspace is Noah Samara, still seemingly attempting to court favourable publicity, perhaps as a counter to the unpleasant Washington financial scandal to which his name has been linked or the legal Class Action that’s still outstanding against him and Worldspace jointly and severally. At the end of April a documentary film, Africa Investment Horizons, was screened at the New York Stock Exchange. The movie was made to show “Africa’s role as a major player in the global economic field [and] is underscored by the fact that film production funds were generated solely from African sources, including: Noah A. Samara, CEO of Worldspace; Sasol; Coca-Cola Africa; Industrial Development Corporation; Trust Africa; and Open Society Foundation for South Africa,” said a release at the time. Quite why Mr Samara needs this sort of management distraction is anyone’s guess. But with Worldspace’s current position and its growing indebtedness, it is something of a surprise. Its position is now catastrophically precarious, and the repeated financial problems would seem to suggest that Worldspace is not going to escape this downward spiral. Its position is akin to those all-too-desperate last throws of the dice in a game of Monopoly. This time Worldspace seems to be landing on penalty square after penalty square with no income to sustain it. |
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