Exclusive: Redstone makes concessions on Viacom CEO in
bid to clinch CBS deal - sources
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[May 05, 2018]
By Jessica Toonkel
(Reuters) - Shari Redstone, the media
heiress whose family controls CBS Corp <CBS.N> and Viacom Inc <VIAB.O>,
has offered CBS CEO Leslie Moonves to drop her demands for Viacom CEO
Bob Bakish to be his No. 2 following a merger, as long as Bakish sits on
the combined company's board, people familiar with the matter said on
Friday.
The offer is an attempt by Redstone to resolve an impasse in the deal
negotiations. Redstone has been trying to put together a deal that will
keep Moonves, a 68-year-old media industry veteran credited with turning
CBS around, at the helm, while positioning up-and-coming Bakish, 54, as
Moonves' successor.
CBS shares rose 8 percent after Reuters first reported Redstone's offer,
giving the company a market value of $20 billion. Viacom shares were up
5 percent, giving it a value of $12.6 billion.
Moonves has agreed to run the combined company for at least two years,
as long as CBS Chief Operating Officer Joseph Ianniello will be
president and chief operating officer of the combined company, so he can
succeed him, sources have previously said.
Redstone, daughter of media mogul Sumner Redstone, has offered not to
give Bakish any executive role in the combined company, but still wants
him to sit on the board of directors and eventually succeed Moonves, the
sources said on Friday.
Moonves does not want Bakish to be part of the combined company at all -
either as an executive or board member - because he is seeking as much
autonomy as possible in running the combined company, said one of the
sources.
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Shari Redstone arrives for Variety's Power of Women luncheon in New
York City, U.S., April 21, 2017. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/File Photo
As a result of the impasse over Bakish's role, CBS executives have serious
doubts that a deal will happen, the source said. CBS and Viacom have also
disagreed about the stock exchange ratio that should be used in a merger,
although the two sides are making progress on that front, the sources added.
The sources asked not to be identified because the matter is confidential. CBS,
Viacom, and National Amusements Inc, the company of Shari Redstone, declined to
comment.
Redstone offered her concessions earlier this week in a meeting with Moonves
that included Richard Parsons, who recently joined the CBS board and is acting
as a conduit between the two sides, the sources said.
There has not been any agreement about the composition of a combined company's
board, the sources said.
Ten of the 14 director nominees for consideration at this year's CBS annual
meeting are 70 or older. The average age is 72. The average for companies in the
S&P 500 Index as a whole is 62. Two of Viacom's directors are 70 or older,
according to the company's proxy statement.
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