The Star Malaysia

Sky thinking of taking over F1, says British Media

-

LONDON: British-based satellite broadcaste­r Sky is mulling over a £

4.5bil (RM26.6bil) bid to take a controllin­g stake in Formula One, potentiall­y trumping a Qatariback­ed consortium’s plan to seize control of the sport, the Sunday Times reported.

Thursday saw the Financial Times report that the owner of the Miami Dolphins NFL team was to join up with Qatar in a bid to take over Formula One.

Sports mogul Stephen Ross and his RSE Ventures, backed by Qatar Sports Investment­s, initially hope to buy 35.5% of the holding company that owns F1 from London-based private equity firm CVC Capital and ultimately buy the entire stake, the paper reported.

However, the Sunday Times citing City of London “sources” said the RSE-Qatari team was just one of several buyers in contact with CVC.

The newspaper said Sky and Liberty Global, the cable conglomera­te set up by the American billionair­e John Malone which is the broadcaste­r’s potential partner in any bid for Formula One, had held informal talks with CVC. The Canadian fashion tycoon Lawrence Stroll, who helped to build the Tommy Hilfiger and Michael Kors brands, has also been linked with a bid.

CVC owns a 35.5% stake in F1 but controls the sport because its shares have special voting rights.

The private equity giant first bought into the sport in 2006, paying

£ 1.2bil (RM7bil) to take control from a group of shareholde­rs, including F1 chief executive Bernie Ecclestone – who remains a key figure in the sport – and the banks JP Morgan, Lehman Brothers and Bayerische Landesbank.

F1 is viewed as one of the most valuable prizes in global broadcasti­ng. The Sunday Times said Pay-TV companies were paying ever-larger sums to secure live sports rights, in an attempt to prevent subscriber­s defecting to online rivals such as Netflix.

Sky

regards F1 as an increasing­ly important part of its sports coverage, especially in Britain where rival broadcaste­r has loosened its grip on top-flight Premier League and European football.

However, Grand Prix team chiefs have warned that the sport is close to a crisis as grandstand seats remain increasing­ly unoccupied and television-viewing figures fall, with races increasing­ly dominated by a handful of drivers. — AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia