Sky's not the limit for
European media mergers
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[December 16, 2016]
By Sophie Sassard
LONDON
(Reuters) - Rupert Murdoch's bid for Britain's Sky is expected to drive
traditional European media players to do their own deals to attain the
scale they need to compete with online platforms like Netflix for
increasingly costly programs.
While Twenty-First Century Fox's offer for Sky is not a done deal,
bankers and industry sources expect it will win control of a 22 million
household pay-TV network in Britain, Ireland, Austria, Germany and Italy
and spark deal-making. "Without doubt we will see further consolidation
across the sector in the months ahead, and crucially, at a quickening
pace," said David Elms, UK head of Media at KPMG.
Consolidation among European broadcasters such as ITV, Prosieben and RTL
Group has so far been held back because the companies were pursuing
different strategies focused on their home market.
However, the rapid emergence of global players such as Netflix and
Amazon means scale is becoming crucial to buying and producing
high-quality content. Sky's deal to bring Sky Italia and Sky Deutschland
under one umbrella was a first move which others could follow, said the
bankers.
"Scale is becoming increasingly important, with companies who have a
broad suite of offerings in terms of content and distribution platforms
growing in strength and, from an M&A perspective, increasing in
firepower," KPMG's Elms said.
Murdoch's move to buy the 61 percent of Sky that Twenty-First Century
Fox does not already own is the latest deal to marry a distribution
network with content after AT&T's $85 billion bid to buy Time Warner Inc
earlier this year.
The business case for bundled services including mobile, fixed-line
communication and pay-TV services was also underlined by French telecom
operator Orange which said earlier this week it would be interested in
buying pay-TV channel Canal+ if owner Vivendi was to sell.
Analysts at UBS said such a move would mirror Telefonica acquiring
pay-TV operator Digital+ in Spain and that Orange would benefit from
cost synergies in areas such as call centers, customer billing,
marketing and corporate overheads.
In Italy, Vivendi chairman and shareholder Vincent Bollore is seeking to
take control of Silvio Berlusconi's TV and production house Mediaset.
Bollore, who controls Vivendi and owns 24 percent in Telecom Italia via
Vivendi, is expected to use his web of shareholdings to strike more
deals in Europe, bankers told Reuters.
BUYING THE BOX SET
Among the potential targets, bankers say ITV could appeal to both
European and U.S. buyers given a low market value - down 26 percent
since January - a strong brand and expanding production business which
includes series such as Victoria, Come dine with Me and Coronation
Street.
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Chairman of Liberty Media John Malone attends the Allen & Co Media
Conference in Sun Valley, Idaho July 12, 2012. REUTERS/Jim Urquhart/File
Photo
Cable and TV mogul John Malone's Liberty Global, is seen as a logical
buyer as it already owns 10 percent of ITV and could distribute its
content via its Virgin Media platform.
"Even if the regulator prevents Virgin Media from exclusively
distributing ITV's content, Virgin could take advantage of the transfer
of competence to then create its own exclusive content," one banker
said. Others said that despite Malone's stake in ITV, others such as
Liberty's sister company Discovery Communication or Germany's Prosieben
could be interested in ITV.
Some of Europe's largest broadcasters have similar market values and
could explore stock mergers to preserve their strong regional identities
and fend off U.S. buyers.
So far, ITV has invested in its film studio, while Prosieben embarked on
an ambitious digital strategy targeting 1.5 billion euros revenues by
2018 partly through bolt-on deals such as price comparison site Verivox.
But combining these businesses could make sense and help diversify from
cyclical TV advertising, the bankers said.
In France cable operator Altice, which bought France's number 2 mobile
player SFR two years ago, has recently created Altice Channel Factory
and Altice Studios to offer exclusive content to its fixed and mobile
clients.
Altice's content push is so far restricted to the French market,
although the group led by French-Israeli billionaire Patrick Drahi
operates telecoms and cable services in other European countries and in
the U.S.
One potential hurdle to deals is that some of the largest European media
companies have owners who value their influence and may not want to
sell, said one of the bankers.
Despite this, dealmakers expect the battle for dominance of the airwaves
triggered by Murdocch to keep them busy in 2017.
(Editing by Alexander Smith)
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