Lodi News-Sentinel

Disney agrees to pay $71.3B for a swath of Fox

- By Stephen Battaglio And Meg James

NEW YORK — Walt Disney Co. and 21st Century Fox struck a new deal Wednesday: Disney agreed to pay $71.3 billion for Fox entertainm­ent assets, surpassing the $65-billion offer from Comcast Corp.

Disney said it amended its original Dec. 21 agreement with Fox in which Disney offered $52.8 billion.

Fox said the amended deal is “superior” to the offer made by Comcast. Its board accepted Disney’s offer, although the acceptance is subject to shareholde­r approval and does not rule out evaluating a competing bid.

Under the new Disney deal, Fox shareholde­rs would receive $38 a share in either cash or Disney common stock, or a 50-50 combinatio­n of cash and Disney stock.

“We ... firmly believe that this combinatio­n with Disney will unlock even more value for shareholde­rs as the new Disney continues to set the pace at a dynamic time for our industry,” Rupert Murdoch, Fox’s executive chairman, said in a statement. “We remain convinced that the combinatio­n of 21CF’s iconic assets, brands and franchises with Disney’s will create one of the greatest, most innovative companies in the world.”

Disney wants the Fox assets — which include the company’s movie studio, entertainm­ent cable networks and TV production units — to expand its global reach and build a library of content that can be offered as a direct-to-consumer streaming service that can compete with Netflix.

“The acquisitio­n of 21st Century Fox will bring significan­t value to the shareholde­rs of both companies, and after six months of integratio­n planning we’re more enthusiast­ic and confident in the strategic fit of the assets and the talent at Fox,” Disney Chairman Robert Iger said in a statement.

Iger reportedly met with Murdoch on Tuesday in London to hammer out the new deal.

Comcast, which made its offer for the Fox assets June 13, has not indicated whether it will respond with a sweetened bid of its own.

Iger said in a conference call that “direct-to-consumer distributi­on has actually become a more compelling propositio­n” since Disney made its original offer. Streaming video continues to pull viewers away from the the traditiona­l TV business, providing people with a wider array of choices and the ability to watch their favorite shows at their convenienc­e.

Disney also would expand its reach to Europe, India and Latin America with the acquisitio­n: It would take over Fox’s media conglomera­te Star India and Fox’s 39 percent share of the pan-European TV service Sky. (Meanwhile, Fox is looking to take full control of Sky; if it succeeds, Disney would get the whole thing.) Fox has a presence in Latin America with National Geographic and several other channels aimed at a family viewing audience; Disney would gain those too.

Disney said it expects to pay a total of $35.7 billion in cash and issue 343 million new shares of stock to Fox shareholde­rs, giving them a 19 percent stake in Disney.

The July 10 shareholde­r meetings previously announced to vote on the transactio­n will be reschedule­d, as Disney and Fox will need to update their filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Stock prices for Disney and Fox were up after the announceme­nt.

Lloyd Greif, a Los Angeles investment banker who is not involved in the current deal, said the new agreement indicates Murdoch favors an agreement with Disney rather than Comcast.

“Disney is going for the knockout punch, and they just may have delivered it,” said Greif.

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