By Keach Hagey and Benjamin Mullin
ViacomCBS Inc.'s parent company is losing some of its ability to
borrow money at a time when its key revenue drivers -- movies,
movie theaters and live-sports TV broadcasts -- have ground to a
halt because of the novel coronavirus.
National Amusements Inc., the movie-theater chain that in recent
decades has become predominantly a holding company for its
controlling stake of ViacomCBS, has reached a deal with Wells Fargo
& Co. to restructure its credit facilities, the company said
Thursday.
The restructuring became necessary after the value of the
ViacomCBS shares pledged as collateral for credit fell below Wells
Fargo's minimum threshold, according to people familiar with the
matter.
ViacomCBS's stock has been under pressure long before fears
about the spread of the coronavirus started roiling global markets.
Shares started dropping pretty much since the merger of sister
companies CBS and Viacom was finalized last year, and are down
nearly 65% so far this year.
As part of the deal with Wells Fargo, National Amusements is
giving up the $75 million revolving credit line that was available
to its movie-theater unit, people familiar with the matter
said.
"Following this amendment, [National Amusements] will have a
revolving facility of $125 million," the company said, which it can
use to fund operations of its theater business. The company's $125
million credit line was existing prior to the deal and had been
renewed, the people said.
National Amusements also said in its filing that it wouldn't
"sell stock in ViacomCBS and does not intend to pledge additional
stock of ViacomCBS" as a result of the new deal.
Shari Redstone, the chairman of ViacomCBS and president of
National Amusements, recently purchased $1 million of nonvoting
shares in ViacomCBS.
Other financial terms of the deal aren't known. A Wells Fargo
spokeswoman declined to comment.
A person familiar with the matter said the movie-theater unit,
NAI Entertainment Holdings, had only drawn upon $25 million of its
$75 million available credit, while the parent company had drawn
upon none of its $125 million in available credit.
Michael Nathanson, an analyst for MoffettNathanson, said there
are plenty of reasons behind ViacomCBS's stock fall, many of which
predate the coronavirus crisis.
The company revised its free cash flow and profitability targets
downward since the 2019 merger of CBS and Viacom, disappointing
many investors, Mr. Nathanson said. Viewers continue to abandon
pay-TV in droves, imperiling one of the company's core revenue
streams.
Last year's merger of Viacom and sister company CBS was billed
as a valuable combination that would create a "content powerhouse"
by fusing Viacom's Paramount film studio and cable networks such as
MTV, Nickelodeon and Comedy Central with the CBS broadcast network,
giving both companies more leverage in negotiations with pay-TV
distributors.
The market wasn't convinced. When the companies announced the
combination in August, the value of the combined company was
roughly $30 billion. By December, after its first day of trading,
the company's value had sunk to $15.3 billion. Earlier this week,
the company's value was $8.9 billion.
Earlier this month, the impact of the coronavirus on movie
theaters as well as ViacomCBS's declining stock price prompted
ratings agency S&P to put National Amusements on credit
watch.
In its report, S&P said that ViacomCBS's slumping share
price caused both National Amusements and its theater chain to
violate a covenant that required the company to maintain a minimum
amount of collateral for its credit. National Amusements obtained a
waiver that gave the company until March 28 to fix the problem.
S&P said it would remove the credit watch once the covenant
violation was resolved.
S&P also said the spread of the coronavirus would continue
to negatively affect theater attendance, which would make National
Amusements' theater chain less profitable in 2020. Showcase
Cinemas, National Amusements' North American theater chain,
announced earlier this month that it was suspending operations
until April 7.
Revenue from the movie theaters owned by National Amusements are
threatened by the near-shutdown of the exhibition industry, as is
Paramount's 2020 film slate, which is loaded with crowd-pleasers
like "Top Gun: Maverick," "A Quiet Place Part II" and a new
SpongeBob SquarePants film.
Elsewhere, the company's TV ad revenue stands to take a
substantial hit from the cancellation of the NCAA Division I Men's
Basketball Tournament, known as "March Madness." Ad revenue for the
tournament, which airs on AT&T Inc.'s TNT channel and the CBS
broadcast network, topped $900 million in 2019, according to market
research provider Kantar Group.
There have been some bright spots for ViacomCBS in recent days.
The company struck deals to renew its licensing agreements with
Nexstar Media Group Inc. and Meredith Corp., agreements that will
lock in long-term affiliate revenue.
Write to Keach Hagey at keach.hagey@wsj.com and Benjamin Mullin
at Benjamin.Mullin@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
March 26, 2020 10:40 ET (14:40 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2020 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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