DJ scandals weigh on Southern Cross

Southern Cross Austereo lifted full year net profit but radio scandals including the royal prank call weighed on ad revenue.

DJ scandals weigh on Southern Cross

Southern Cross Austereo lifted net profit but scandals involving its DJs weighed on ad revenue.

Poorly rating TV programs and the royal radio prank have hit Southern Cross Austereo's revenue.

But the TV and radio broadcaster still managed a slight rise in full year profit, and says it is confident its key TV program supplier, the Ten Network, can turn around its fortunes.

The main cause of a 6.5 per cent fall in sales revenue to $642.6 million was its regional TV stations, which get their programs from the poorly performing Ten.

TV revenues were down 12.9 per cent to $214 million.

"We are confident about what Channel 10 are doing, they presented to us a very solid and robust strategy for the next three years on what they are trying to do with programming," Southern Cross Austereo chief financial officer Stephen Kelly told analysts.

"We are very supportive, the gap is expected to improve as better ratings and re-focussed sales efforts start to impact in coming years."

Revenue from the company's metropolitan radio network, which includes the Today and Triple M networks, fell four per cent to $262.5 million.

Regional radio revenue improved slightly to $176.2 million.

Scandals involving presenter Kyle Sandilands and what the company called the "UK incident" hit its market share and ad revenues.

Austereo suspended all advertising on 2Day FM after a scandal involving the suicide of a British nurse, who was taken in by a prank call by presenters Mel Greig and Michael Christian.

The pair phoned the hospital where the Duchess of Cambridge was being treated for a pregnancy-related illness, pretending to be the Queen and Prince of Wales.

Southern Cross Austereo's market share fell to 33.3 per cent earlier this, before recovering to 35 per cent.

Its market share hit a peak of 38.7 per cent two years ago.

Still, the TV and radio broadcaster made a net profit of $96.1 million in the year to June 30, up 1.2 per cent on the previous year.

The result was boosted by $10.4 million in proceeds from the forced sale of a radio station in Queensland to comply with media reach rules.

Investors liked the result, sending its shares up 10.5 cents, or 7.1 per cent, to $1.585, as of 1251 AEST.

Chief executive Rhys Holleran described the advertising market as difficult, and does not expect it to get any easier.

The group declared a final fully franked dividend of 4.5 cents per share, down from 5.0 cents last year.


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Source: AAP


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