December 25, 2024

Comcast turns focus to Sky after exiting battle for 21st Century Fox

Comcast has pulled out of its pursuit of 21st Century Fox, turning its focus to trumping Rupert Murdoch’s attempt to take full control of Sky.

The US media and cable company’s decision to end its battle with Disney will make Murdoch’s long-held ambition of buying the 61% of Sky he does not already own a more difficult task.

Last week, in a day of bid and counterbid, Comcast tabled a £26bn offer to buy Sky, trumping Murdoch within hours of the media mogul making a new £24.5bn offer. Sky’s independent committee has recommended that shareholders accept Comcast’s offer.

“Comcast does not intend to pursue further the acquisition of the 21st Century Fox assets and, instead, will focus on our recommended offer for Sky,” said Brian Roberts, chairman and chief executive of Comcast.

Sky’s share price fell 2% following Comcast’s news, indicating investor fears that Murdoch might not now return with an improved bid.

Brian Roberts, chairman and CEO of Comcast
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 Brian Roberts, chairman and chief executive officer of Comcast, said his company will focus on acquiring Sky. Photograph: Drew Angerer/Getty Images

Under the deal that Fox has with Disney, Murdoch must gain consent to raise his bid. With Comcast out of the Fox hunt, it is not clear if Disney will decide it needs to also own the 61% of Sky not already owned by Murdoch’s company. Fox owns the other 39% of Sky.

While both Fox and Sky have huge strategic value to Comcast, analysts had speculated that Sky’s 23 million pay-TV customers across Europe would prove to be the bigger draw.

For Comcast, a Sky deal would make it the world’s largest pay-TV operator – it is already the biggest in the US – and at a stroke reduce its almost total dependence on the US for revenues. Owning Sky would result in Comcast’s non-US revenues rising from 9% to 25% of its total.

If Comcast is successful in taking over at least 51% of Sky the company has said that it could live with the Murdochs or Disney as minority shareholders, but it hopes to engineer a full takeover. It is unlikely either company would remain a minority shareholder in the event Comcast succeeds.

Comcast had also been involved in a bidding war against Disney for Fox, last month tabling a hostile all-cash $65bn bid that topped Disney’s first offer.

Disney subsequently sweetened its offer to $71.3bn and recently gained regulatory approval in the US, with Fox shareholders due to vote on the deal on 27 July.

For more read the full of article at The Guardian

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