Radio Jamaica losses widen to $502m as advertising weakness exposes structural strain
Radio Jamaica Limited’s nine-month loss widened to $502 million, underscoring mounting pressure on Jamaica’s largest listed media group as advertising revenues contract and the company moves into full restructuring mode.
Revenue fell $489 million, or 12.1 per cent, year-on-year in the period to December. The December quarter was particularly severe, with revenue down 28.8 per cent after Hurricane Melissa disrupted commercial activity and prompted advertisers to defer spending. The loss compares with $329 million in the corresponding period last year.
The storm accelerated the decline. It did not initiate it.
Management had signalled earlier in the year that revenues were already running about 10 per cent below prior levels by June. The latest figures suggest that what might once have been considered cyclical softness is hardening into structural fragility within the advertising-funded model.
Operating leverage is now working against the business. Although expenses were reduced by approximately $376 million over the nine months, the scale of the revenue contraction more than offset those savings. The December quarter alone produced a $242 million after-tax loss, compared with $58.8 million a year earlier.
Cash discipline has improved. Net cash used in operations narrowed to $161.8 million from $250.7 million in the prior year. But the stabilisation was supported by $500 million in new loans, lifting period-end cash balances to $270 million and pushing long-term borrowings to roughly $856 million.
In effect, the group has traded liquidity stability for higher leverage while earnings remain negative.
The response has shifted from incremental savings to structural redesign. RJR is reducing its principal corporate entities from 13 to three, centralising governance and consolidating support functions. A joint printing arrangement has been advanced and property rationalisation is under consideration as management seeks to simplify the cost base.
Such measures typically signal recognition that revenue recovery alone cannot be relied upon to restore margins.
Ownership remains tightly held. The top 10 shareholders control 61.4820 per cent of the company. Connected holdings associated with directors Joseph M Matalon and Peter Melhado each represent 15.58597 per cent, while Douglas Orane’s combined stake stands at 14.18569 per cent. The restructuring therefore proceeds with the backing of dominant shareholder blocs.
For investors, the question is less about whether the company can cut costs further and more about whether its revenue base can be stabilised in a market where advertising spend is increasingly dispersed across digital and global platforms. Without that stabilisation, efficiency gains may slow losses — but not reverse them.
The latest results suggest the company has entered a period where financial resilience will depend as much on balance-sheet management as on audience reach.
— Dashan Hendricks