France’s Canal+ Plans to Buy Multichoice Group
France’s Canal+ Group, which has in recent years been buying up a significant stake in MultiChoice Group on the open market, is now moving to take control of the South African pay-television group, should South African media ownership restrictions allow it.
Canal+ said yesterday that it would offer R105/share for MultiChoice, or a 40 per cent premium to the closing price on 31 January 2024.
It already holds 31.7 per cent of MultiChoice’s equity, according to a regulatory filing last year. The indicate offer price would value MultiChoice at about R48-billion.
The French broadcaster said it submitted a letter to the MultiChoice Group board in which it has made a “non-binding indicative offer to acquire all of the issued ordinary shares of MultiChoice that it does not already own, subject to obtaining the necessary regulatory approvals”.
The move comes as MultiChoice increasingly works with another global broadcasting group, Comcast, which owns NBCUniversal and the UK’s Sky. The two Comcast companies have worked closely with MultiChoice to relaunch Showmax, its streaming video entertainment offering.
Given South African broadcasting rules, which prohibit foreign entities from owning more than 20 per cent of a local broadcaster’s voting rights, it might be difficult for Canal+ to get the deal across the line, assuming MultiChoice is prepared to entertain it, sources said.
Canal+, in an e-mailed statement issued prior to the market open in Johannesburg yesterday, said: “Subject to certain confirmations that Canal+ expects following further engagements with MultiChoice, Canal+ anticipates its offer to be for a cash consideration of R105 per MultiChoice ordinary share, which would represent a premium of 40 per cent to MultiChoice’s closing share price of R75 on 31 January."
The intention letter read: “Upon the satisfactory completion of a confirmatory due diligence, Canal+ intends to deliver a firm intention letter to the independent board,” it said.
“At this stage, there can be no certainty about the progression of the potential offer, nor the terms of any transaction that may occur.