Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

BUSINESS Murdoch heir’s interview sets tongues wagging over Fox control of Sky

- RUSSELL LYNCH

LONDON: James Murdoch is nothing if not a tease. The annointed heir to father Rupert’s media empire set City tongues wagging this week in his first interview as the new chief executive of the US film and television giant 21st Century Fox.

The fate of Fox’s 39 percent stake in the satellite broadcaste­r Sky – whose forerunner, BSkyB, was once run by James Murdoch – is a perennial subject of speculatio­n among company watchers, and mired in the sort of politics and animus that only the Murdochs can inspire. Will Fox buy the rest of Sky or sell its holding, worth £7.3 billion and granting effective control of the company?

Using the unlikely medium of The Hollywood Reporter, Murdoch said: “We’ve been clear that, over time, having 40 percent of an unconsolid­ated asset is not an end state that is natural for us.” The delphic comments were interprete­d bullishly, but in reality give little hint on his strategy.

Experts say that a Conservati­ve government could look favourably on a new bid. But would the Murdoch clan really have the stomach for another shot at Sky, with the events of five years ago still reverberat­ing on the UK media scene?

To recap, News Corporatio­n, another part of the Murdoch empire, made two bids to buy the rest of BSkyB in the summer of 2010, but the then business secretary Vince Cable intervened and referred the deal to the regulator, amid worries over the Murdochs taking too big a grip on the British media. Then Cable was stripped of his role in deciding on the deal when he told two undercover reporters he had “declared war” on Rupert Murdoch.

News Corporatio­n spun off Sky News to address media plurality concerns, but a week before the culture secretary Jeremy Hunt was due to wave through the deal in July 2011, the phone- hacking scandal broke and News Corporatio­n – under fire from all sides – abandoned the bid.

It was split into two companies: 21st Century Fox, and “new” News Corp, which owns newspapers such as The Sun and The Times.

Clearly, even five years on, another manoeuvre by the Murdochs will have sensitivit­ies well beyond the corporate scene. No wonder, then, that James told The Hollywood Reporter “there are no plans on the agenda right now”.

Indeed, when Fox has looked at buying, it has been focused on the US. It was rebuffed in a $ 80bn (£ 52bn) attempt last year to buy Time Warner, the owner of HBO and Warner Bros. The deal would have created a media behemoth with huge clout among the cable operators distributi­ng its shows, as well as a sports broadcasti­ng giant with big footprints in Asia, Europe and Latin America.

But where Fox has been active in Europe recently, it has been selling – and selling to Sky. Last year it landed £5bn by selling its controllin­g stake in Sky Deutschlan­d and the wholly owned Sky Italia business to BSkyB, which then dropped the “British” and “Broadcasti­ng” from its name to reflect its growing status as a pan-European pay-TV powerhouse.

City analysts believe Fox will offload the Sky stake before long. That’s because the company is trading in a much tougher UK market than five years ago. BT is now a big player in football, holding Champions League and Premier League rights, and the cost of those sports auctions is going up: the Premier rights alone cost £ 5.1bn this year. Average revenue per user, meanwhile – a figure closely watched in the City – is flat at £47. Additional­ly, the likes of Disney are increasing­ly bypassing pay-TV companies; only this week the entertainm­ent giant launched its own UK streaming service, with shows and music heading straight to viewers’ tablets for £10 a month.

The Berenberg bank analyst Sarah Simon said: “We think Fox are much more likely to sell their stake in Sky than buy the rest of the company. Having sold their German and Italian businesses last summer – particular­ly Germany, the jewel in the crown – why would they buy them back at a premium? The UK landscape is different, because five years ago BT hadn’t bought football rights. Sky is holding its own but at the expense of lower prices.

“In the US, investors distrust pay TV now that content producers can go directly to consumers. If Fox sold its stake in Sky, we think the shares would rerate. Fox investors are pushing for this”.

The Murdochs’ associatio­n with UK satellite TV stretches to the founding of Sky 25 years ago. It looks far from certain that they will be around for another 25. – The Independen­t

 ??  ?? James Murdoch.
James Murdoch.

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