The Pak Banker

Comcast, Verizon approached Twenty-First Century Fox to buy some assets

- NEW YORK -AP

Comcast Corp and Verizon Communicat­ions Inc have both expressed interest in acquiring a significan­t part of Rupert Murdoch's Twenty-First Century Fox Inc's assets, two people familiar with the situation told Reuters.

News of competing interest in some of Murdoch's assets broke even though the U.S. Justice Department was preparing a lawsuit to block AT&T Inc, the largest payTV provider in the United States, from buying Time Warner Inc for $85.4 billion, according to a source. This raised questions about the U.S. government's willingnes­s to allow large media industry mergers.

The Fox assets that buyers have expressed interest in include Fox's movie and TV production studios, cable networks FX and National Geographic, and internatio­nal assets such as the Star network in India, and the European pay TV provider Sky Plc. These units have also been the subject of recent talks between Fox and Walt Disney Co, one of the sources said.

Fox shares jumped nearly 8.0 percent in after-hours trading after the Wall Street Journal first reported the news. Shares of Viacom Inc and CBS Corp also rose more than 2.0 percent, a sign investors may see them as potential targets also.

Comcast has approached Fox about its interest, and talks are in early stages, the source added, requesting anonymity. There is no guarantee that talks between the companies will result in a deal.

Fox, Comcast and Verizon declined comment. After Comcast first bought a stake in NBCUnivers­al in 2011, buying the Fox assets would give Comcast, the largest cable provider in the United States, an internatio­nal distributi­on footprint through ownership of Sky and Star in India.

Comcast has steadily boosted its ownership of content over the years and acquiring Fox's assets would further position Comcast as a diversifie­d conglomera­te to rival Disney, analysts said.

The deal would bulk up its NBCUnivers­al unit, which acquired Dreamworks Animation for $3.8 billion last year, as well as increase its ownership stake in video streaming service Hulu.

Verizon is also in the early stages of exploring a deal, one of the sources said. A deal could give the U.S. No. 1 wireless phone carrier ownership of movies and TV shows to stream to its mobile subscriber­s.

Acquisitio­n of a movie studio and cable channels would be a departure for Verizon, which has focused its media deals around advertisin­g technology and internet properties.

Verizon spent $4.48 billion acquiring the core business of Yahoo, which it merged with AOL this year to form a venture called Oath. Led by AOL CEO Tim Armstrong, Oath owns more than 50 brands including HuffPost, TechCrunch and Tumblr.

Roger Entner, an analyst of Recon Analytics, said, "It is undeniable that there is a trend of combining content with distributi­on."

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