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Billboard Operators, Already Hurt by Recession, Face Ad Bans All Over the U.S.

Pity poor Lamar Advertising, one of the country's largest providers of outdoor billboards and signs. In February, the company will report its full-year results for 2008 and BNET is guessing thery're going to be bad.

This isn't a controversial guess. Lamar's Q3 results were shaky: revenue flat, net income down, cashflow up, dividends suspended, and questions about whether the company was going to meet its debt requirements.

One reason Lamar could be heading for a headache-inducing earnings call is the current environment for outdoor ads is kinda awful. The industry has so far led a charmed life -- it's the one part of advertising that isn't really affected by the internet. Even better, the rise of digitally programmed billboards (like you often see in Las Vegas or Times Square) gave companies like Lamar a new story to tell.

But all across America, local cities and towns are clamping down, trying to get rid of as many billboards as possible. Here's a selection of fires Lamar and its competitors have had to fight recently:

(Background: electronic signs, which as a rule of thumb cost around $500,000, display a new image about every eight seconds. Many can be changed online from a central location, so over time they become cheaper.)

In this environment, coupled with the economic downturn, the chances of Lamar showing revenue growth are slim indeed.

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