The Jerusalem Post

Murdoch’s Twenty-First Century Fox bids $14 billion for UK’s Sky

- • By JESSICA TOONKEL, KATE HOLTON and PAMELA BARBAGLIA

NEW YORK/LONDON (Reuters) – Rupert Murdoch’s Twenty-First Century Fox Inc. has struck a preliminar­y deal to buy the 61% of British pay-TV firm Sky Plc it does not already own for around $14 billion, five years after a political scandal wrecked a previous bid.

The proposed offer of £10.75 a share in cash, which is backed by Sky’s independen­t directors, would strengthen the position of James Murdoch – who is both chief executive of Fox and chairman of Sky – in his 85-year-old father’s media empire.

People familiar with the matter said Fox had pounced after Britain’s vote to leave the European Union in June sent the pound down about 14% against the US dollar and Sky’s share price tumbling.

Owning Sky would give Fox, whose cable networks include Fox News and FX, control of a pay-TV network spanning 22 million households in Britain, Ireland, Austria, Germany and Italy.

It would also be the latest deal to marry distributi­on with content after AT&T Inc. announced an $85b. bid to buy Time Warner Inc. earlier this year. While Sky does produce some of its own content, including in news and sport, the deal would give Fox full ownership of a wider distributi­on platform in Europe.

“Fox has always seen its 39% stake in Sky as an unnatural state of being and has long been trying to buy full control,” a person familiar with the deal said.

“Now it was the perfect moment. With the weak pound (and lower stock price), Sky has become 40% cheaper and the government is supportive of almost any investment in Britain.”

Rupert Murdoch’s previous attempt to buy Sky through his News Corp. business provoked uproar among some UK politician­s, who said it would give the billionair­e owner of The Sun and The Times newspapers too much control over the country’s media.

That bid collapsed in 2011 when Murdoch’s UK newspaper business was engulfed in a phone hacking scandal that intensifie­d political opposition, resulted in a criminal trial and led to the closure of his News of the World tabloid.

Liberum analysts said Friday’s proposal was likely to have an easier ride, partly because News Corp. has now separated from Fox, which means the bidding firm no longer owns UK newspapers, and because there are no competitio­n issues.

They also said the British government was keen to promote investment in the wake of the Brexit vote and could present the deal as a sign of confidence in the economy.

Prime Minister Theresa May met with Rupert Murdoch after a visit to the United Nations in September, according to media reports.

Fox said it would reinforce Britain’s standing as a top global hub for content generation and technologi­cal innovation.

Tom Watson, deputy leader of Britain’s opposition Labour Party and a key critic of the Murdochs during the 2011 scandal, called on regulators to be ready to properly vet the deal – but did not oppose it outright.

“This bid has been expected since 2011,” he said.

James tightens grip

Fox’s proposed bid is a 36.2% premium to Sky’s closing share price on Thursday. It values the company at about £18.5b. ($23.2b.) and the stake Fox does not already own at £11.25b., according to Reuters calculatio­ns.

Martin Gilbert, a member of Sky’s board who will assess the bid as part of its independen­t committee, told Reuters the offer was a good premium worth presenting to shareholde­rs.

Even so, analysts at Citi characteri­zed the offer as a “low-ball bid,” citing a fair value assessment of £13.50 per share.

Sky’s shares closed up 26.7% around £10, while Fox’s were down 1.8%at $28.12 at 8:20 p.m. in London.

Before Friday’s surge, Sky’s shares had dropped 30% this year in part due to concerns of an UK economic slowdown caused by Brexit.

The deal has also been made more attractive for Fox by a drop in the value of sterling, which makes it cheaper for foreign firms to buy UK assets. British tech company ARM was snapped up by Japan’s SoftBank Group Corp. in the days after the Brexit vote and shares in UK commercial broadcaste­r ITV Plc closed up 5% on Friday on speculatio­n it could be next.

Long tipped as his father’s successor, James Murdoch’s reappointm­ent as chairman of Sky earlier this year reignited speculatio­n of another bid approach by Fox.

Britain’s takeover watchdog has set Fox a deadline of January 6 to make a firm bid or walk away. Sky said that “certain material offer terms” remained under discussion, and that there could be no certainty that an offer would be made by Fox.

The terms still under discussion include the size of the break-up fee, as well as some other contractua­l obligation­s of the two companies to close the deal, according to people familiar with the matter. These are not expected to present any major hurdle to agreeing on a deal, the people added.

Deutsche Bank AG and Centerview Partners Holdings LLC are advising Fox, and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. also provided it with advice. PJT Partners Inc., Morgan Stanley and Barclays Plc are working with Sky.

 ?? (Peter Nicholls/Reuters) ?? MEDIA MOGUL Rupert Murdoch poses for a photograph with his sons 21st Century Fox Executive co-chairman Lachlan (left) and Fox CEO and Sky chairman James as they arrive at St. Bride’s church in London for a service to celebrate the wedding between...
(Peter Nicholls/Reuters) MEDIA MOGUL Rupert Murdoch poses for a photograph with his sons 21st Century Fox Executive co-chairman Lachlan (left) and Fox CEO and Sky chairman James as they arrive at St. Bride’s church in London for a service to celebrate the wedding between...

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