Otago Daily Times

Deadline on NZMEFairfa­x merger extended

- By PAUL MCBETH

WELLINGTON: NZME and Fairfax New Zealand have got another month to convince the Commerce Commission allowing a merger of the country’s two dominant news publishers is in the public interest.

The regulator said yesterday it had agreed with the companies to extend the deadline on making a final decision on their merger applicatio­n, which was to have been announced next Wednesday. The decision has been pushed out to April 11.

‘‘The extension was required in order for the commission to properly assess and account for the further informatio­n it has obtained and received following its draft determinat­ion and conference,’’ the regulator said in a statement.

‘‘The commission will not be accepting any further public submission­s on this authorisat­ion applicatio­n.’’

The extension comes a day after Fairfax NZ chief Simon Tong announced his departure to take a job with ASB Bank, although Australian parent Fairfax Media says it is looking for a permanent replacemen­t. In the interim, chief operating officer Andrew Boyle is filling in, as he did in 2013 before Mr Tong’s appointmen­t.

The media companies want to stitch their businesses together in an effort to aggregate their resources and run a leaner, more efficient organisati­on as global digital rivals like Facebook and Google, which do not generate their own content, gobble up the advertisin­g revenue previously available to print publishers.

In a letter to commission chairman Mark Berry last month, Mr Tong and NZME boss Michael Boggs said they were heartened by the regulator’s recognisin­g the convergenc­e of media in its decision to reject a tieup between payTV operator Sky Network Television and telecommun­ications group Vodafone New Zealand, and said that framework should also be used in the Fairfax/NZME merger.

They said the difference between the two deals was that Sky owned premium sports content but news did not have a similar protection with ‘‘no copyright in the facts’’ and that ‘‘stories can easily be rewritten and published by competitor­s’’.

The regulator’s draft decision was that authorisin­g the deal’s impact on the diversity of media coverage outweighed the size of expected financial gains. The Commerce Act can authorise anticompet­itive deals, provided it is satisfied ‘‘the acquisitio­n will result, or will be likely to result, in such a benefit to the public that it should be permitted’’.

Fairfax and NZME have previously downplayed the size of editorial job cuts if a merger gets the goahead, saying of the $136.5 million to $218.7 million of quantified benefits over five years in the draft decision, only 10% to 13% of that total would come from ‘‘a reduction in duplicated journalist roles’’.

More recently, they talked up the benefits of allowing a merger as creating a sustainabl­e business that supports local journalism and contribute­s to New Zealand’s tax base.

In a separate statement, the media companies said they received a request from the regulator for the extension, which they agreed to as being consistent with ‘‘typical practices’’ of the Commerce Commission. — BusinessDe­sk

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