Business Standard

Disney buys Fox assets in $52-billion deal

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Walt Disney Co agreed to a $52.4-billion deal to acquire much of the global empire that media baron Rupert Murdoch assembled over three decades, from a fabled Hollywood studio to Europe’s largest satellite-TV provider to one of India’s most-watched channels. Holders of 21st Century Fox will get 0.2745 Disney share for each Fox share, for assets including the movie and TV production house, a 39 per cent stake in Sky Plc, Star India, and a lineup of pay-TV channels.

Walt Disney Co agreed to a $52.4-billion deal to acquire much of the global empire that media baron Rupert Murdoch assembled over three decades, from a fabled Hollywood studio to Europe’s largest satellite-TV provider to one of India’s mostwatche­d channels.

Holders of Murdoch’s 21st Century Fox Inc will get 0.2745 Disney share for each Fox share, for assets including the movie and TV production house, a 39 per cent stake in Sky Plc, Star India, and a lineup of pay-TV channels that include FX and National Geographic, the companies said in statements Thursday. The price amounts to about $29.54 a share, based on Disney’s closing price Wednesday. Both companies’ stocks slipped in early trading.

Via a spinoff, the mogul will continue to run Fox News Channel, the FS1 sports network and the Fox broadcast network in the US. Disney Chief Executive Officer Bob Iger will remain in his role through 2021, the companies said. Fox plans to complete its planned acquisitio­n of the 61 percent of European broadcaste­r Sky that it doesn’t already own, which will wind up in Disney’s hands.

The sale marks an epic downsizing for Murdoch, an 86-year-old former Australian who spent his adult life amassing the assets that made him a kingmaker in US and UK politics. Iger said Thursday he’ll discuss a possible role at Disney with Murdoch’s son James, Fox’s CEO, after he completes work on the merger transition. If Disney does offer the 45-yearold Murdoch a job, he could vie to succeed Iger, 66.

“This is the end of an era for the Murdochs, who after 30 years of aggressive empire expansion are now in retreat,” said Tom Watson, deputy leader of the UK Labour Party. Watson played a pivotal role in the campaign against phonehacki­ng at Murdoch’s newspapers in 2011, which scuttled his first attempt to take control of Sky. Disney will also assume about $13.7 billion of net debt from Fox. The deal will give Disney $2 billion of cost savings and start adding to earnings two years after the takeover is complete. The deal will close in 12 to 18 months, Disney said.

Disney beat out rival bidder Comcast Corp for the Fox assets in a deal brought on by dramatic changes in the media landscape. The rise of alternativ­e forms of online entertainm­ent, from Netflix to Snapchat, have led millions of once-loyal pay-TV subscriber­s to cut the cord, forcing TV companies to band together to ensure their long-term survival. Discovery Communicat­ions Inc agreed in July to acquire Scripps Networks Interactiv­e Inc, and Time Warner Inc is trying to sell itself to AT&T Inc.

The Justice Department has sued to block that AT&T deal, and Disney’s Fox transactio­n is also likely to receive heavy regulatory scrutiny by bringing so many media assets under one roof. Disney, the owner of ESPN, is acquiring regional Fox networks that air local basketball and baseball games, giving the company an unpreceden­ted amount of rights to sports programmin­g.

Buying Fox’s movie studio will give Disney the rights to make movies based on the XMencomic books, adding to an already stocked cabinet of superheroe­s such as Iron Man and Thor.

Shares of New York-based Fox fell 2.3 per cent to $32 in early trading, reflecting investor concern that the deal could get blocked by regulators. Disney’s offer values all of Fox, including the parts that will be spun off and remain under the Murdochs’ control, at about $40 a share, a person familiar with the matter said this week.

“They have done the best deal they could,” Claire Enders, founder of media research firm Enders Analysis, said of Fox. “They don’t need any money. They want to have higherqual­ity assets and they’re going to have a very substantia­l shareholdi­ng in a much better set of assets that fit better.”

Disney, based in Burbank, California, fell one per cent to $106.58. The company said it will buy back $10 billion in stock to offset dilution from the deal.

In recent years, the elder Murdoch has handed off management of 21st Century Fox to his sons, James and Lachlan, 46, who shares the title of executive chairman with his father. The legendary media mogul is also the largest shareholde­r in News Corp, a separate company that owns publishing operations including the Wall Street Journal.

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 ??  ?? Rupert Murdoch will continue to run Fox News and the Fox broadcast network in the US
Rupert Murdoch will continue to run Fox News and the Fox broadcast network in the US

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