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Clear Channel, banks, buyers in settlement talks



By MICHELLE ROBERTS
12 May 2008 @ 05:13 pm EST

SAN ANTONIO (AP) - Clear Channel Communications Inc. and its prospective buyers are talking with banks to try to settle a dispute over whether the banks must fund promised loans for the $19.5 billion takeover, the radio and outdoor advertising company said Monday.

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Clear Channel shares jumped $2.87, or 9.6 percent, to $32.87.

The company and its private equity buyers, Bain Capital and Thomas H. Lee Partners, sued a consortium of six banks, accusing them of trying to undermine the deal by changing the terms. That lawsuit is pending in a Texas court, while the equity firms have a separate suit pending against the banks in New York court.

Pretrial hearings in San Antonio and the trial in New York were delayed Monday. The trial before a New York Supreme Court judge was rescheduled to start Tuesday.

San Antonio-based Clear Channel confirmed the postponement in court proceedings was designed to allow the parties to continue settlement talks, though it would not comment on the terms of a possible settlement or whether one was likely.

A spokesman for the banks declined to comment.

The equity firms have been struggling to close the proposed deal, at $39.20 per share, as the credit markets have faltered and the share price has declined on fears the deal wouldn't close.

A busted deal would subject the private equity firms to roughly $500 million in fees. But funding the loan at the original terms would cost the banks $3 billion to $4 billion in write-downs with fewer institutions looking to buy up the debt.

The Wall Street Journal, citing unnamed sources familiar with the deal, reported Monday that the proposed settlement calls for the deal to be re-priced at $36 per share -less than the initial offers rejected by some shareholders as too low.

The buyout of the nation's largest radio station operator and a global powerhouse in outdoor advertising has been tumultuous from the beginning.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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