Comcast drops bid for Fox assets, leaving
Disney in pole position
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[December 12, 2017]
By Anjali Athavaley
(Reuters) - Comcast Corp said on Monday it
had abandoned its bid for most of the assets of Rupert Murdoch’s
Twenty-First Century Fox Inc, leaving Walt Disney Co as the sole suitor
in pursuit of the $40 billion-plus deal.
Sources told Reuters last week that Disney was in the lead to acquire
the assets, which include Fox's FX and National Geographic cable
channels, its movie studio, the Star network in India and stake in
European pay-TV provider Sky PLC.
The Murdoch family, which controls Fox, prefers a deal with Disney
because it would rather be paid in Disney stock than Comcast stock, and
expects a potential deal with Disney to be cleared by U.S. antitrust
regulators more easily, one of the sources said.
Comcast, the biggest cable provider in the United States, said in a
statement on Monday that its discussions with Fox had ended.
"When a set of assets like Fox's becomes available, it is our
responsibility to evaluate if there is a strategic fit that could
benefit our company and our shareholders," Comcast said. "That is what
we tried to do and we are no longer engaged in the review of those
assets. We never got the level of engagement needed to make a definitive
offer."
The assets in question would have expanded Comcast's international
footprint through ownership of Sky and Star. A source told Reuters in
mid-November that Comcast had approached Fox about its interest, and
talks were in early stages.
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The Twenty-First Century Fox Studios logo is seen in Los Angeles,
California U.S. November 6, 2017. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson
Disney's negotiations with Fox are continuing, and a deal could be
reached as early as this month, sources close to the situation said
on Monday. The persons asked not to be identified because the
deliberations are confidential.
Disney did not immediately respond to request for comment. A Fox
representative declined to comment.
Any potential deal will follow the U.S. Department of Justice's
decision last month to sue to block AT&T Inc's $85.4 billion deal to
buy Time Warner Inc.
Comcast shares were up 1.5 percent in after-hours trading, while
Disney shares were up 0.2 percent and Fox shares fell 1.3 percent.
(Reporting by Anjali Athavaley and Jessica Toonkel in New York;
Editing by Matthew Lewis)
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