Fort Baker’s TEGNA Exit: A Vanishing Act

February 17th, 2026. A date which, viewed from a certain altitude, appears no different from any other. Yet, on this day, Fort Baker Capital Management LP performed a curious act: a complete and utter abandonment of TEGNA. One might almost suspect a clandestine meeting, a whispered pact with forces unseen… but no, merely a filing with the SEC. How disappointingly mundane.

The Disappearance

Fort Baker, it seems, has decided TEGNA no longer fits its portfolio. A clean sweep, 1,678,588 shares vanishing into the ether, amounting to some $34.30 million. A sum, of course, that could build a small palace, or perhaps, merely sustain the illusion of one. The transaction, calculated with the precision of a watchmaker, reflects the quarter’s average share price. A price, naturally, subject to the whims of the market, a creature far more capricious than any Tsar.

Further Observations

  • TEGNA, once a proud 1.7% of Fort Baker’s reported assets under management, is now… absent. Like a character abruptly removed from a novel, leaving a disconcerting gap in the narrative.
  • The current favorites of the fund, as of this writing, are as follows:
    • NASDAQ:FYBR: $40.59 million (4.4% of AUM)
    • NASDAQ:CYBR: $38.63 million (4.2% of AUM)
    • NASDAQ:WBD: $38.24 million (4.2% of AUM)
    • NYSE: EVAC: $37.45 million (4.1% of AUM)
    • NYSE: CWAN: $36.89 million (4.0% of AUM)
  • As of February 13th, 2026, TEGNA shares were priced at $20.95, a modest ascent of 18.6% over the past year. A respectable performance, perhaps, but in the grand theater of the market, merely a flickering candle. It even managed to outperform the S&P 500 by 6.8 percentage points. A fleeting victory, no doubt.

A Brief Profile

Metric Value
Revenue (TTM) $2.71 billion
Net income (TTM) $219.86 million
Dividend yield 2.39%
Price (as of market close 2/13/26) $20.95

The Company Itself

  • TEGNA operates 64 television stations across 51 U.S. markets, dispensing news, entertainment, and digital content. It also owns a curious collection of multicast networks – True Crime Network, Quest, and Twist – and produces original programming through VAULT Studios. A veritable empire of flickering screens.
  • Revenue is generated primarily through advertising, retransmission fees, and the increasingly ethereal realm of over-the-top (OTT) platforms.
  • It serves both local and national advertisers, delivering content to a populace increasingly fragmented and distracted.

TEGNA Inc., a media company of considerable scale, stands at a crossroads. A diversified portfolio, a wide audience… yet, one senses a certain fragility. A dependence on a business model that appears, shall we say, increasingly… precarious.

What Does This Mean for Investors?

Fort Baker, it should be noted, engaged in a considerable pruning of its portfolio in the fourth quarter of 2025. TEGNA was simply the largest branch to fall. The stock, after a period of stagnation, experienced a brief resurgence. But the disappearance of political advertising revenue in 2025, a predictable consequence of the election cycle, undoubtedly cast a shadow.

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The official reason for Fort Baker’s departure remains, naturally, a mystery. But one suspects a more fundamental force at play: the inexorable tide of cord-cutting. For years, consumers have been abandoning traditional television in favor of streaming services. And the rise of platforms like Alphabet’s YouTube has only accelerated the process. The old ways are fading, replaced by a digital wilderness.

TEGNA still earns a profit, and even pays a dividend. A commendable achievement, to be sure. But in a world of shifting sands, a mere dividend may not be enough to secure a future. It is a comforting illusion, perhaps, but an illusion nonetheless.

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2026-03-18 03:13