THISDAY

France’s Canal+ Plans to Buy Multichoic­e Group

- Emma Okonji with agency report

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.

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