The Borneo Post (Sabah)

John Malone, the Cable Cowboy, isn’t ready to hang up his spurs

- By Gerry Smith

My primary effort has been reducing business travel as much as I can so my wife is alone as little as possible,” Malone said in a phone interview. “And I’m getting old. What else do people expect? Am I going to jump off all these boards all of a sudden? No. John Malone, media mogul

WHEN John Malone retired from the boards of Lions Gate and Charter Communicat­ions last month, the media and telecom industries shuddered: Was the Cable Cowboy finally calling it quits? Not quite. The 77-year-old billionair­e, who helped build the pay-TV industry and now sees it threatened by cord cutting, remains on the boards of eight public companies and has no plans to leave them. He’s still the largest shareholde­r of Charter, the No. 2 US cable company. Two of his deputies are still directors at Lions Gate, an independen­t studio. And when he calls, executives still listen. Nothing is really changing, he says.

He just wants to spend more time with his wife.

“My primary effort has been reducing business travel as much as I can so my wife is alone as little as possible,” Malone said in a phone interview. “And I’m getting old. What else do people expect? Am I going to jump off all these boards all of a sudden? No.”

Some companies he’s invested in have made adjustment­s. While in Ireland recently, he met with executives from Liberty Global, the London-based pay-TV company where he holds a 28 per cent voting stake, to review their technology plans.

“That kind of accommodat­ion is working for me at this stage of my life, so I’m happy to stay on those boards and I’m proud to stay on those boards,” Malone said. “These are great businesses that I helped build and I’m obviously deeply invested in them.”

Malone has long been a reluctant mogul. He relished being a chief executive officer, but never liked the jet-setting that took him away from his high- school sweetheart Leslie — “my life’s companion.” He has been promising he’d be home more since he took over as CEO of TeleCommun­ications in 1972 and helped build it into the world’s largest cable company, according to Mark Robichaux’s 2002 book “Cable Cowboy.”

He quit being a CEO for good 14 years ago after his wife developed a serious heart condition. Instead, he became an investor, a board member and cheerleade­r for his companies, as well as a tireless dealmaker. He’s worth US$9.1 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionair­es Index.

Liberty Media, which Malone spun off from TCI in the early 1990s, has expanded over the years through investment­s in a range of companies where he has varying degrees of control, including satellite radio company Sirius XM Holdings, Charter and Formula One, the racing circuit. He’s a major shareholde­r in cable channel owner Discovery and chairman of Liberty Global. He sold TCI to AT&T in 1998 for US$48 billion.

In 1994, the New Yorker called him “the most influentia­l man in television.” Al Gore once nicknamed him “Darth Vader” for his aggressive business tactics.

“He understand­s how to buy businesses, he understand­s how to sell them,” said Mario Gabelli, the billionair­e money manager who’s known Malone since the 1970s and runs a fund based on his holdings. “He has no problem loving them and leaving them.”

Malone has plenty to keep him busy. He’s the largest landowner in the US and enjoys tending to his ranches. He owns a major forestry business in the Northeast and is active in thoroughbr­ed racing and breeding. He runs or chairs three foundation­s and controls nine hotels in Ireland. He likes sailing, fishing and spending time with his grandchild­ren.

He’s the de facto CEO of those private interests and spends his fortune how he pleases.

“It’s much more fun because it’s your money and you don’t have to apologise to the public, the shareholde­rs, the media or anybody,” Malone said. “If I decide to take a flier on a horse and the horse turns out to be a lemon, that’s my risk.”

That’s not to say Malone has become a bystander. His public companies are still doing deals and he’s willing to opine on his competitor­s, including Walt Disney’s recent blockbuste­r deal to buy much of Rupert Murdoch’s 21st Century Fox empire in a US$71 billion in cash and stock. To some, Murdoch’s decision to sell looked like surrender — recognitio­n that the company couldn’t keep up with new titans like Netflix. Malone sees it differentl­y.

“If you look five years forward, you’ll see Rupert was the grand champion here,” Malone said. “He and his family end up major shareholde­rs of a great combined company and he’s paid a big premium because of the competitio­n for the assets he built.”

In a statement, Murdoch called Malone “one of the world’s greatest dealmakers. Very different but almost equal to Warren Buffett. Sometimes a frenemy, but always a friend. John was a huge help in starting Fox News.”

Malone sees the media and telecom industry today as a Rubik’s Cube, his engineer’s mind constantly weighing potential combinatio­ns. Cable companies and wireless companies should merge because they have “huge synergies,” he says. To wit, Malone’s Liberty Global is selling its European cable assets to wireless provider Vodafone for US$22 billion.

“John is a four-dimensiona­l chess player and knows where the pieces are going,” Gabelli said. “His legacy will be that he was one of leading architects in the entire world of content and connectivi­ty.”

Malone has some regrets. His biggest: selling At Home, an early version of high-speed internet, to AT&T. The phone giant didn’t invest in At Home — a missed opportunit­y, he says.

He also laments how Netflix, Facebook and Amazon.com created massive businesses over the broadband networks that cable companies built, saying his industry should have exploited the technology more for its own benefit. The success of those Silicon Valley giants “is going to reshape the whole media industry.”

Netflix “has become the guy that everyone wants to be now and few will,” he said. “We’re just beginning to see that. The FoxDisney deal is just an indicator of what the target is.”

Malone has begun to think about his legacy. He may have been dubbed a “cable cowboy” but he likens himself to Otto von Bismarck, saying he helped unify the fragmented cable industry just as Germany’s first chancellor brought together a bunch of fighting principali­ties in the 19th century.

He also invokes the Roman Empire when discussing the landscape today. The convergenc­e of telecom, entertainm­ent and technology has brought these businesses to a crossroads — with technology companies looking like new dynasties built on top of the ruins of telecom and entertainm­ent. But the cable industry isn’t finished yet.

“That’s just how capitalism works,” he said. “But we’re still in the game. We’ll see how this evolves.” — WP-Bloomberg

 ??  ?? VISITS TO BUILD STUDIO: Actor Nick Kroll (left) and director Chris Weitz visit Build to discuss the movie ‘Operation Finale’ at Build Studio on Tuesday in New York City. (Left) Actress Rhea Seehorn visits Build to discuss the TV series ‘Better Call Saul’ on Tuesday; and (far left) Brittany JonesCoope­r (left to right), Shannon Coffey, author Jenny Han, Ali Kolbert and Lukas Thimm attend the Build Brunch at Build Studio on Tuesday. — AFP photos
VISITS TO BUILD STUDIO: Actor Nick Kroll (left) and director Chris Weitz visit Build to discuss the movie ‘Operation Finale’ at Build Studio on Tuesday in New York City. (Left) Actress Rhea Seehorn visits Build to discuss the TV series ‘Better Call Saul’ on Tuesday; and (far left) Brittany JonesCoope­r (left to right), Shannon Coffey, author Jenny Han, Ali Kolbert and Lukas Thimm attend the Build Brunch at Build Studio on Tuesday. — AFP photos
 ??  ?? Malone at the Allen & Co. Media and Technology Conference in Sun Valley, Idaho, on July 7, 2016. — WP-Bloomberg file photo
Malone at the Allen & Co. Media and Technology Conference in Sun Valley, Idaho, on July 7, 2016. — WP-Bloomberg file photo

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