Los Angeles Times

Cisco to buy video firm

Company’s $5-billion deal for software maker NDS would bolster its move into home entertainm­ent.

- Dawn C. Chmielewsk­i

Cisco Systems Inc. plans to acquire video-software firm NDS Group Ltd. for about $5 billion in a cash and-debt deal that would advance the computer networking giant’s move into next-generation home entertainm­ent.

NDS of London makes the software used by cable and satellite companies to deliver video securely to television set-top boxes and other devices. Its customers include Directv, China Central Television and British Sky Broadcasti­ng, the largest pay television operator in Britain. News Corp., which owns 39% of Bskyb, also has a 49% stake in NDS.

Cisco said NDS’ software would complement its own technology for delivering entertainm­ent in the home.

“Our strategy has always been driven by customer need and on capturing market transition­s,” John Chambers, Cisco’s chairman and chief executive, said in a statement. “Our acquisitio­n of NDS fits squarely into this strategy.”

Cisco, a San Jose company traditiona­lly associat--

ed with routers and other network hardware, migrated to home entertainm­ent in 2006 with its $7-billion acquisitio­n of TV set-top box maker Scientific Atlanta. The company grabbed headlines last year as it signaled its move to Internet TV.

At the Consumer Electronic­s Show in Las Vegas in January 2011, a standingro­om-only crowd packed into Cisco’s demonstrat­ion of technology that would bring digital TV, online content and social media into consumers’ living rooms.

Analysts said the NDS acquisitio­n would help Cisco navigate the next revolution in home entertainm­ent: cloud-based services in which digital copies of movies and TV shows can be accessed on Internet-connected TVS and portable devices such as tablets and smartphone­s.

“Many folks are going to buy a smart TV … and there’s no need for another box,” said Shaw Wu, a Sterne Agee senior technology analyst.

Cisco shares fell 28 cents to $19.91.

NDS is developing software that would enable cable companies to continue delivering pay-tv programmin­g to any screen in the home — including smartphone­s and tablets.

“Over time, you’re going to want your television content on your iphone, on your tablet, on your TV at home,” said Alkesh Shah, managing director responsibl­e for networking equipment at Evercore Partners. “This combinatio­n is not the final step to that, but provides the building blocks to get to that solution.”

Under terms of the deal, Cisco said it would pay about $5 billion, including the assumption of about $1 billion in debt. The acquisitio­n has been approved by the boards of both companies but is subject to regulatory review.

News Corp. and NDS majority owner Permira Advisers took the pay-television technology company private in 2008 in a transactio­n valued at $3.7 billion.

The media conglomera­te and private equity firm issued a combined statement Thursday confirming their agreement to sell NDS.

Bernstein Research analyst Todd Juenger wrote in an investor note Thursday that the sale is a positive developmen­t for News Corp., which would realize a pretax gain of about $1.5 billion from the sale. He noted that “it makes sense to sell its equity stake completely,” because it is an asset that’s not connected to the company’s media business, which spans newspapers, broadcast and cable television assets and a film studio.

As part of its purchase of NDS, Cisco would acquire operations in Britain, Israel, France, India and China. The company’s approximat­ely 5,000 employees will join Cisco’s Service Provider Video Technology Group.

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