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Sony and Apollo express interest in buying Paramount in $26 bn deal

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LOS ANGELES: Sony Pictures Entertainm­ent and the private equity giant Apollo Global Management have formally expressed interest in acquiring Paramount for roughly $26 bn, per two people familiar with the matter, a move that adds drama to an already chaotic deal making process.

The non-binding expression of interest, sent in a letter this week, comes as Paramount approaches an agreed-upon Friday deadline for the expiration of an exclusive negotiatin­g period with Skydance, a Hollywood studio run by the tech scion David Ellison. Paramount has been in talks with Skydance for months, discussing a complicate­d transactio­n that would involve a merger and an investment from the private equity firm Redbird Capital Partners.

The new, joint expression of interest would make Sony a significan­t majority and controllin­g shareholde­r and Apollo a minority shareholde­r. The proposed all-cash acquisitio­n may appeal to Paramount shareholde­rs who have come out against the Skydance deal over concerns it benefits the company’s controllin­g shareholde­r, Shari Redstone, at the expense of others. Paramount declined to comment.

The proposed merger of Sony and Paramount would create a new powerhouse in Hollywood, uniting the studios behind the “Spider Man” and “Mission: Impossible” franchises. Sony executives have discussed operating the Paramount studio as a division of their broader empire, combining their marketing and distributi­on functions.

Sony, a sprawling internatio­nal conglomera­te known for its cutting-edge electronic­s business, is an unconventi­onal suitor for Paramount. Like Comcast, which owns NBCUnivers­al, Sony has a highly profitable business outside traditiona­l media, generating hundreds of millions of dollars from video games, music, imaging and sensors. That insulates Sony from the travails of the media industry, which has lately been challenged by the decline of the traditiona­l theatrical business and the death of cable television.

The letter, which was signed by Tony Vinciquerr­a, the chief executive of Sony Pictures Entertainm­ent, and Aaron Sobel, a partner at Apollo, is intended to be a starting point for negotiatio­ns to acquire the company, according to be a person familiar with the matter. The two sides have not begun doing due diligence, a process that could affect the amount Sony and Apollo are willing to pay.

One looming question for both Apollo and Sony is the eventual fate of Paramount’s CBS broadcast network. Regulation­s restrict foreign ownership of broadcast networks. ---NYT

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