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Comcast to pay $45.2B for Time Warner

- ALEX SHERMAN, JEFFREY MCCRACKEN AND EDMUND LEE

NEW YORK — Comcast Corp. agreed to acquire Time Warner Cable Inc. for $45.2 billion US in stock, a surprise deal that combines the two largest U.S. cable companies and creates a bulwark against competitio­n from phone and satellite providers.

Time Warner Cable investors will receive 2.875 Comcast stock for each of their shares, the companies said in a joint statement Thursday. The purchase values each Time Warner Cable share at $158.82, or 17 per cent more than its closing price Wednesday. The transactio­n, subject to approval by stockholde­rs and regulators, is expected to be completed by the end of 2014.

In sealing the deal, Comcast chief executive officer Brian Roberts trumped a bid from Charter Communicat­ions Inc. and its billionair­e backer John Malone, who had courted Time Warner Cable for months. The merger also will help the companies cope with an industrywi­de decline in cable-TV viewers following years of inroads by phone and satellite companies, as well as newer Internet services such as Hulu LLC and Aereo Inc.

“This leaves Comcast as the sole king of the cable hill, with John Malone and Charter hitting a brick wall in their hopes of becoming a close No. 2,” said Richard Greenfield, an analyst with BTIG LLC. “This is a game changer for Comcast.”

Holding out for a better offer than Charter’s $132.50-ashare bid allowed Time Warner Cable to deliver an almost 70 per cent gain for shareholde­rs over the past year.

Shares of Charter, which now has to plan its next steps after getting locked out of the deal, tumbled 6.3 per cent to $128.91.

Time Warner Cable shareholde­rs will own about 23 per cent of Comcast’s common stock after the transactio­n is completed.

The deal, which doesn’t carry a breakup fee for either side, will generate savings of about $1.5 billion and increase Comcast’s free cash flow per share, according to the statement. Comcast, based in Philadelph­ia, also announced plans to buy back an additional $10 billion of its shares.

Charter is unlikely to match Comcast’s bid and is willing to study any assets Comcast would sell, said a person familiar with the matter, who asked not to be identified because the negotiatio­ns were private.

 ?? ANDREW BURTON/Getty Images file photo ?? Comcast’s deal to buy Time Warner Cable for more than $45 billion US is a “game-changer” for Comcast, analysts say.
ANDREW BURTON/Getty Images file photo Comcast’s deal to buy Time Warner Cable for more than $45 billion US is a “game-changer” for Comcast, analysts say.

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