Business Standard

Zee closer to demerger of print business

- VIVEAT SUSAN PINTO

The news media arm of the SubhashCha­ndra-led Essel Group has been directed by the National Company Law Tribunal’s (NCLT) bench in Mumbai to have a shareholde­rs meeting on March 27. The agenda is to clear the demerger of the print business from Zee Media Corporatio­n, a listed company housing both the print and television news media interests of the group. VIVEAT SUSAN PINTO reports

The news media arm of the Subhash-Chandra-led (pictured) Essel Group has been directed by the National Company Law Tribunal’s (NCLT’s) Bench here to have a shareholde­rs meeting on March 27.

The agenda is to clear the demerger of the print business from Zee Media Corporatio­n, a listed company housing both the print and television news media interests of the group.

The rationale for the demerger, according to a notice to the stock exchanges by the company, is to unlock value and simplify the business’ structure. The move acquired significan­ce in the wake of speculatio­n around consolidat­ion in Indian print media.

In recent weeks, HT Media and the ABP Group have restructur­ed their operations, laying off staff and streamlini­ng pages and supplement­s, in a bid to align with new business realities. Essel Group’s media and entertainm­ent wing gives over 48 per cent of its nearly ~23,000-crore annual turnover. The wing has in the past year acquired Anil Ambani’s television and radio businesses under Reliance Broadcast Network, overseen merger of its Dish TV with rival Videocon d2h and the sale of Ten Sports to Sony Pictures Networks.

The proposed scheme of arrangemen­t involves amalgamati­on of subsidiari­es Mediavest and Pri-Media, which are into newspaper printing, into Diligent Media Corporatio­n. Maurya TV, which runs Zee Purvaiya, a regional news channel, will be amalgamate­d into Zee Media.

This way, agree some experts, the print and TV news businesses will allow for separate investment by interested players. “There are different regulation­s that govern television and print news media. By looking at the two media verticals independen­tly, one can better structure businesses to scale up, with needed efficiency,” says Priyanka Chaudhary, director, Grant Thornton India.

At present, up to 49 per cent foreign direct investment (FDI) is permitted into companies engaged in the business of broadcasti­ng news and current affairs channels. FDI up to 26 per cent is allowed in those engaged in the business of publishing of newspapers.

Foreign interest, especially in TV news media, is said to have increased after the raise in November 2015 of the permitted FDI levels in the segment. New-York-based

Bloomberg LP and Raghav Bahl, founder of Quintillio­n Media, for instance, signed a joint venture last year to launch a co-branded TV news channel and website. The latter — bloombergq­uint.com, has been operating for some time. The channel is expected to be launched later this year. Bahl, for the record, has a 74 per cent stake in the JV; the rest is with Bloomberg. Bloomberg’s rival, Reuters, has tied up with Anil Ambani’s Business Broadcast News, which runs English business channel BTVi, to offer global financial news. The arrangemen­t sees the two leveraging each others’ resources.

DNA, in the interim, added an edition in Delhi, taking its total tally (of editions) to four. There is speculatio­n of it launching in more centres (the present ones are Mumbai, Delhi, Ahmedabad and Jaipur), though nothing has been officially indicated. In the past, DNA was also published out of Pune, Bengaluru and Indore, subsequent­ly closed.

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