The Bradenton Herald

Sony in talks to team with Apollo to bid for Paramount

- BY MEG JAMES

Sony Pictures Entertainm­ent is in talks to join Apollo Global Management in its $26 billion bid for Paramount Global – a partnershi­p that would boost the private equity firm’s efforts to wrangle the prize.

While the talks are preliminar­y, the two sides have been hashing out the contours of a deal that would have the Culver City, California-based Sony film and television studio take the lead in the partnershi­p.

If a deal were consummate­d, Sony would control a significan­t majority stake in Paramount, according to two people familiar with the discussion­s but who were not authorized to speak publicly.

Sony and Apollo haven’t formally made a bid for Paramount. Instead, they are on the sidelines during an exclusive 30-day negotiatio­n period that Paramount’s independen­t board of directors has extended to entreprene­ur David Ellison, who heads Skydance Media, the producer of “Top Gun: Maverick” and other Hollywood blockbuste­rs.

That negotiatio­n period expires in early May.

Ellison has teamed up with investment firms RedBird Capital and KKR in its takeover of Shari Redstone’s family holding company National Amusements, which would be followed by a merger of Skydance with Paramount. Ellison and former NBCUnivers­al Chief Executive Jeff Shell, who’s now an executive with RedBird, would likely run the company.

The two-step structure of that proposed deal, which may not come to fruition, has complicate­d the auction process.

Redstone, Paramount’s controllin­g shareholde­r, has long preferred the Ellison deal because she doesn’t want the company, which her father Sumner Redstone built over two decades, to be broken into pieces. But the Ellison proposal has generated a strong backlash by Paramount investors who contend the deal would benefit Redstone and not regular shareholde­rs.

Should the Sony-Apollo deal eventually be accepted and approved by regulators, Sony Pictures Entertainm­ent Chief Executive Tony Vinciquerr­a would likely run the operation. Sony has previously expressed interest in taking over the Melrose Avenue film studio, but was rebuffed because Paramount’s bankers have said they want to sell the company whole.

Spokespeop­le for Sony and Paramount declined to comment Thursday night.

The New York Times first reported the news of the Sony and Apollo talks.

Earlier this year, Apollo sent a letter to Paramount’s board, offering to purchase its film and TV studio operations for $11 billion. When that didn’t fly, Apollo raised the price to $26 billion, which would include taking on Paramount’s $15 billion in debt. The cash component for the entire company is still around $11 billion, knowledgea­ble people say.

Apollo was the latest to make a play for Paramount, getting in line behind Ellison’s Skydance, David Zaslav’s Warner Bros. Discovery, and Byron Allen’s Allen Media Group.

Warner Bros. Discovery’s pursuit of a deal with Paramount was shortlived, not progressin­g beyond preliminar­y highlevel talks, while Allen Media Group is said to still be interested.

A proposed Sony-Apollo combinatio­n would likely trigger regulatory concerns because it would result in eliminatin­g one of the remaining film studios in Hollywood.

Sony would combine the Melrose Avenue Paramount Pictures with its Culver City operations.

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