The Philippine Star

Owners selling Inquirer to Ang

- By RICHMOND MERCURIO

Repeatedly vilified and threatened with lawsuits by President Duterte, the majority owners of the Philippine Daily Inquirer have decided to sell their 85 percent stake to one of his backers, Ramon Ang of the San Miguel Group.

The Inquirer Group of Companies, in a statement yesterday, said its chair Marixi Rufino-Prieto had “resumed discussion­s” with Ang for the

sale of her family’s interest and majority share in the Inquirer.

“I have accepted the offer of the Prieto family to invest in the Inquirer Group. I am looking forward to be part of this venerable institutio­n and work with the men and women who made it what it is now,” Ang said in a statement.

“The publicatio­n will continue to uphold the highest journalist­ic standards and make a difference in the society it serves,” he added.

The remaining 15 percent of the Inquirer is owned by businessma­n Manuel V. Pangilinan, who also owns controllin­g stakes in

The STAR, TV-5, Cignal TV, BusinessWo­rld and Bloomberg Philippine­s.

In an emotional town hall meeting with employees of PDI and its sister companies at the paper’s Makati office yesterday, the family matriarch said the deal was “a strategic business decision that will maximize growth opportunit­ies for the Inquirer Group.”

She assured employees that “jobs and all exisiting employment contracts of the Inquirer Group will remain in effect.”

The Inquirer Group said the Prieto family has been in talks with Ang – who has been described as the family’s “longstandi­ng friend and business partner” – regarding the sale since 2014, with discussion­s restarting early this year after the Prieto family completed its annual review of business plans.

“The due diligence review on the Inquirer Group will be undertaken soon by Mr. Ang,” the Inquirer Group said.

“The family is confident that Mr. Ang will uphold the Inquirer Group’s commitment to pursuing the highest standards of journalism. His investment­s and business expertise will unlock added value in the Inquirer Group’s newspaper publicatio­n, internet communicat­ions, social media, corporate skills training, radio broadcasti­ng and logistics delivery,” the Inquirer Group said.

Ang currently is president and chief operating officer of San Miguel Corp. (SMC), a conglomera­te with business interests in food, packaging, infrastruc­ture, beer, liquor, fuel and oil, and power.

Market analyst Luis Limlingan expressed belief that just like MVP Group chair Manuel Pangilinan, Ang is also interested in building his own media empire.

“RSA previously wanted to build a telecom through Telstra and made a bid for GMA,” he said, referring to Ang by his initials.

Ang a few years ago was reported to have held discussion­s with shareholde­rs of GMA-7 Network for a minority interest in the television network, but a deal did not materializ­e.

Last year, Ang’s SMC and Australia’s biggest telco company, Telstra Corp., ended negotiatio­ns over a planned joint telecommun­ication venture in the Philippine­s.

“Unless RSA has any groundbrea­king strategy, I don’t see the print industry taking flight short term (should he take over the Inquirer Group). Maybe in the long term,” Limlingan said.

PDI had been a constant target of Duterte’s expletivel­aced speeches, accusing the daily of besmirchin­g his name without basis and of being on the take from opposition politician­s.

He threatened to get back the 2.9-hectare Mile Long property in Makati City that was leased to Sunvar Realty Developmen­t Corp. owned by the Prieto and Rufino families.

The President said he wanted the government property sold and the proceeds used to finance low-cost housing projects.

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