Los Angeles Times

COMCAST FORMING VENTURE FIRM

- By Meg James meg.james@latimes.com

Comcast Corp. is forming a venture capital firm with more than $4 billion in assets that will be run by the company’s longtime chief financial officer, Michael Angelakis.

Angelakis, one of Comcast’s most experience­d and prominent executives, will step down from his current position to run the new company after a transition period, Comcast said Tuesday in a statement.

The new venture would focus on investing in and operating growth-oriented companies in the U.S. and abroad.

Angelakis has long been one of the most trusted deputies of Comcast Chief Executive Brian Roberts. Angelakis designed the complicate­d maneuvers that enabled Comcast to take control of NBCUnivers­al by buying General Electric’s long-held interest without leveraging Comcast’s balance sheet.

He also was a key architect in structurin­g Comcast’s proposed purchase of Time Warner Cable, which is awaiting federal approval. That deal would make Comcast a juggernaut with 29 million subscriber­s, including in the nation’s largest markets of Los Angeles, New York, Chicago and Philadelph­ia.

Angelakis, 50, joined Comcast in 2007 and became its CFO the following year.

He has “helped transform Comcast into the media and technology company that we are today,” Roberts said in a statement.

The new venture would have “the resources to pursue new areas of growth and diversific­ation for Comcast,” the company said in its statement.

Comcast will seed the new firm with $4 billion. Angelakis will contribute at least $40 million of his own money. The company would be run similar to a private equity firm with other senior executives making equity investment­s.

The new company will have an exclusive, 10-year arrangemen­t with Comcast, which will be the sole outside investor.

Angelakis is expected to stay on at Comcast through a transition period while a new CFO is identified. If regulators approve Comcast’s proposed $45-billion acquisitio­n of Time Warner Cable, Angelakis would then serve as an advisor to Comcast in the early stages of its integratio­n of the Time Warner Cable systems.

“As we enter the final phase of the Time Warner Cable transactio­n, this is a great time to begin a transition and I am excited to start this new, entreprene­urial company,” Angelakis said.

Before joining Comcast, the former banker was a managing director of private equity firm Providence Equity Partners. Before that, Angelakis was CEO of State Cable TV Corp. and Aurora Telecommun­ications.

He serves as deputy chairman of the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelph­ia and is a trustee of Babson College.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States