Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Comcast offers $31B in bid for Sky

- MICHAEL J. DE LA MERCED

LONDON — Comcast formally unveiled a $31 billion takeover bid for Sky on Wednesday, putting the U.S. cable giant squarely in a battle with Rupert Murdoch’s 21st Century Fox for control over the British satellite broadcaste­r. The total price with debt would be about $40 billion.

The terms of the longawaite­d proposal were good enough to prompt Sky to withdraw its recommenda­tion for Fox’s $16 billion bid for the 61 percent of Sky that it does not already own.

What may follow is a battle for Sky, a broadcaste­r whose 23 million customers stretch across significan­t parts of Europe. It also owns the lucrative broadcast rights to the English Premier League and other profession­al sports competitio­ns. Such is its value that Robert Iger, chief executive of the Walt Disney Co., has called it “a real crown jewel.”

For Comcast, buying Sky would accelerate its internatio­nal expansion plans and give its NBCUnivers­al arm a more global platform. It would also complicate Fox’s plan to sell the bulk of its businesses to Disney for $52.4 billion. Comcast had made a bid for Fox properties that was 16 percent higher than Disney’s on a per-share basis, but that proposal was rebuffed, partly because Comcast refused to offer protection­s in the event of regulatory rejection.

For Murdoch, buying the 61 percent of Sky that Fox does not currently own would give his company full control of a strongly performing business to which the media mogul has a special attachment. He founded the broadcaste­r in the early 1990s and had previously tried to

buy the entire company, only to be forced to withdraw his bid in the wake of a British phone-hacking scandal involving one of his tabloids.

Comcast’s move, telegraphe­d two months ago, seizes upon Fox’s troubles in getting government approval for its bid, which was announced in late 2016. British regulators have questioned whether buying Sky, which operates the 24-hour news channel Sky News, would give Murdoch too much control over the country’s news media, given his ownership of newspapers like The Times of London and The Sun.

It also changes the calculus for Fox and Disney. Both have already offered concession­s to allay regulators’ concerns, including an offer to sell Sky News to Disney.

But now they may be forced to pay up to win Sky.

Under the terms of its offer, Comcast would pay $17.45 in cash for each Sky share. Fox has offered about $15 a share.

Hoping to press on Fox’s weak spot, Comcast said it was committed to Sky News’ editorial independen­ce, offering to set up a board for the news unit and maintain its funding. Comcast also repeated pledges to increase investment in Britain’s film and television industries.

“We will invest to grow and enhance Sky’s business and be a strong steward of its valuable brand,” Brian L. Roberts, Comcast’s chairman and chief executive, said in a statement. “Sky is a great British business — with us, that’s the way it will always be.”

Disney did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

In a statement, Fox said it remained committed to its takeover offer and was considerin­g its options. It could raise its offer, which would likely require Disney’s consent. Or it could do nothing and hold onto its 39 percent stake, potentiall­y putting it in an uneasy alliance with Comcast if its rival’s offer goes through.

While Sky withdrew its recommenda­tion for Fox’s bid, it is not clear if it will

formally back either Comcast or Fox. That may depend in part on how regulators rule on either bid. Britain’s competitio­n regulator is expected to offer its recommenda­tion on Fox’s bid by Tuesday. A final decision, by the country’s culture secretary, is expected by mid-June.

Meanwhile, Comcast reported in its first-quarter earnings release that it lost 96,000 Xfinity TV customers in the quarter, a sharp contrast to the 42,000 it added a year ago.

Comcast added 379,000 high-speed Internet customers as it inexorably shifts away from TV distributi­on and into what it calls a “connectivi­ty” business.

Revenue was $22.8 billion in the quarter compared with $20.6 billion in the year-ago period. The Super Bowl and the Winter Olympics — both televised by NBC — raised Comcast Corp.’s first-quarter revenue by 10.7 percent even as telecom competitio­n and the “cord-cutting” trend ate into its television customer base, the company said Wednesday.

 ?? AP file photo ?? Comcast’s offer for Sky sets off a bidding contest with 21st Century Fox for control of the British satellite broadcaste­r.
AP file photo Comcast’s offer for Sky sets off a bidding contest with 21st Century Fox for control of the British satellite broadcaste­r.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States