Cox Enterprises’ 14 TV stations, which include some of the nation’s top local television stations, reach 31 million viewers nationwide. It is selling a majority stake in the stations to investment funds affiliated with Apollo Global Management

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ATLANTA — Cox Enterprises on Friday announced a deal to sell a majority stake in its portfolio of 14 television stations, including Seattle CBS affiliate KIRO-TV, to an international investment firm. The TV properties will become part of a new media company headquartered in Atlanta.

Investment funds affiliated with Apollo Global Management will hold the controlling interest in the Cox Media Group television properties, as well as Cox’s newspapers and radio stations in Ohio. Cox, a privately held broadband, automotive services and media company based in Sandy Springs, Georgia, will remain a minority owner of the new company.

Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed. The agreement is subject to regulatory approval, which could take about six months.

The regional television industry has seen a wave of consolidation. Much like the newspaper and radio industries, the broadcast TV business has battled a shift in advertising dollars to internet rivals, including Google and Facebook. But fees stations collect from cable operators remain potent sources of revenue.

Cox’s stations are among the best-performing in the industry. TV operators, clamoring for scale amid expected changes in regulatory conditions, coveted the Cox portfolio. Some 11 bidders, which Cox declined to name, expressed interest in the stations.

“These stations have decades of experience breaking barriers and delivering the news and information their communities need daily,” said Alex Taylor, president and CEO, Cox Enterprises. “We wanted to find a company that is committed to investing in broadcast television now and in the future, and we found that in Apollo.”

Apollo is an international investment company and managed about $280 billion in assets at the end of 2018. The company’s business lines include private equity, real estate and credit, and the business has subsidiaries in chemicals, retail, financial services, hospitality and media.

Apollo is a new entrant into the local broadcast television business. A recent Reuters report said Apollo is bidding for some stations from Nexstar Media Group and has an agreement to purchase stations from Northwest Broadcasting, an operator of local TV stations in the Pacific Northwest region.

Cox owns or has interest in some of the nation’s top local television stations, including in Atlanta, Boston, Charlotte, Orlando, Pittsburgh, Memphis, Jacksonville, Tulsa and Dayton, Ohio. The stations, which include WSB-TV in Atlanta, WSOC-TV in Charlotte, and WPXI-TV in Pittsburgh, reach more than 31 million viewers nationwide.

Cox Media Group retains its ownership of The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, WSB radio, several other Atlanta radio stations and media properties in other markets.

As part of the transaction, Apollo will take on the Dayton Daily News, Springfield News-Sun and Journal-News newspapers, as well as three radio stations in Dayton. The newspapers, radio stations and WHIO-TV in Dayton share a unique business model that involve full integration of their operations.

Apollo plans to maintain the Cox Media management and operating structure within the new company, which has yet to be named.