Bangkok Post

Fox offers concession to seal Sky takeover

- PAUL SANDLE

LONDON: Rupert Murdoch’s 21st Century Fox on Mondahy pledged to keep Sky News independen­t and continue funding the loss-making channel for five years, in an attempt to overcome regulatory concerns over its $15.7 billion takeover of pay-TV firm Sky Plc.

Fox said it would establish a fully independen­t board for the news channel to ensure the 86-year-old media mogul and his family could not influence its output.

Britain’s competitio­n regulator said last month that Fox’s deal to buy the 61% of Sky it does not already own should be blocked unless a way was found to reduce the influence Murdoch could wield through owning The Sun and The Times newspapers, as well as TV, radio and online news outlets.

Some lawyers, investors and analysts have said that a stronger mechanism to guarantee the independen­ce of Sky News should be enough to gain approval.

Looming over the Fox-Sky takeover is a $52.4 billion deal that would result in Walt Disney Co buying Fox’s TV and film studios, its cable TV assets and internatio­nal TV businesses including Sky — leaving the Murdochs with Fox’s US news and sports channels, as well as their News Corp newspaper and publishing assets.

The Competitio­n and Markets Authority (CMA) had already said the Disney deal should be taken into considerat­ion when any remedies are assessed.

Fox, which disputes the CMA’s finding on the media power it would have if it owned Sky, said any concerns about the Murdoch influence would fall away after a Disney takeover.

The regulator had said the output of Murdoch’s companies would be watched, read or heard by nearly a third of the British population, giving him too much sway over public opinion.

In January it put forward three broad possible solutions: insulating Sky News from Fox’s influence, spinning off or divesting Sky News, or blocking the deal outright.

Sky, however, warned the regulator that if it blocked the deal, it could close the loss-making channel completely, killing the main British competitor to the BBC in 24-hour TV news.

Fox said the regulator’s assessment was based on a number of legal and factual errors, but nonetheles­s promised to fund Sky News for at least five years and said it would put a “firewall” around the channel as remedies.

“The combined effect of the Proposed Firewall Remedies is that there could be no circumstan­ces in which, post-transactio­n, the MFT (Murdoch family trust) or members of the Murdoch family could influence, whether directly or indirectly, the editorial line or policy of Sky News,” the company said.

It said it would establish a fully independen­t board to oversee Sky News, including the appointmen­t of the head of the channel, who will have sole responsibi­lity for editorial strategy and staffing.

The proposal builds on a previous Fox pledge to create a Sky News board with a majority of independen­t directors.

But the CMA noted opponents of the deal had said previous offers by Murdoch to guarantee the editorial independen­ce of the Times newspapers in Britain and the Dow Jones company had proved ineffectiv­e.

Former opposition Labour leader Ed Milliband and ex-Conservati­ve finance minister Kenneth Clarke were among four lawmakers who said the deal should be blocked.

Fox’s proposals were released by the CMA on Monday. It is due to present media secretary Matt Hancock with a final report by May 1 and he has said he will rule on the deal by June 14.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand