News Corp in 2005: Consolidating the DirecTV Acquisition

            




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The DirecTV Deal

?#8364;œDon' t worry. We don' t want to take over the world. We just want a piece of it."

Murdoch

Television programs were delivered by cable or through satellite. Satellite had much wider reach than cable. Cable operators beamed programming content through cables to the subscribers' homes. In case of Satellite television, satellites orbiting in the sky did the job, without the need for any cable connection.

Murdoch had been excited about satellite communications right from his childhood. In the mid 1980s, Murdoch paid ?#8218;? 10 million for a controlling interest in Sky Television (Sky), a pan-European channel that aired common programs to several European countries. By 1987, Murdoch had spent ?#8218;? 40 million on Sky, which reached nearly 12 million homes in 20 European countries.

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In 1990, after prolonged negotiations, BSB, a television channel, merged with Sky, into a single company, British Sky Broadcasting (BSkyB). Between 1989 and 1992, the combined entity made losses of about $ 1.2 billion. As BSkyB introduced better programs and aired soccer matches exclusively, it achieved a turnaround by the end of 1992 and revenues rose to ?#8218;? 385 million.

By 1993, BSkyB reached financial stability. Over the next four years, the company developed new content and innovative programs. By 1997, 25% of British homes were subscribers to the channel. By 2001, Sky had 5 million customers and had become the first digital television channel in the world by moving its operations from analog to digital. By June 2002, BSkyB had 6.1 million subscribers and a 20% increase in revenues over 2001.

Meanwhile, DirecTV had made significant progress with its direct broadcast satellite services. Attractive sports content, aggressive marketing and free installation resulted in rapid penetration of DirecTV. By 2000, DirecTV had enrolled more than 9.5 million subscribers to become the largest satellite-based provider of television content in the US. DirecTV offered more than 225 programming channels, to 60 million homes in about 40 cities in the US.

Murdoch realized DirecTV would add the strategic US market to his worldwide network of satellite distribution that included BSkyB in Britain, Star TV in Asia, Foxtel in Australia, SkyTel in Latin America, and Stream in Italy. DirecTV would eliminate dependence on cable distribution in the US market and fortify News Corp' s fast-growing cable networks, which included Fox News, Fox Sports, National Geographic, and Speed Channel, which carried motor sports. DirecTV gave Murdoch the missing link in News Corp' s worldwide satellite-distribution system. As press reports put it, the DirecTV acquisition made Murdoch

?#8364;œa general in both the content and distribution camps" .

In September 2000, Murdoch offered $ 22 billion for a 35% stake in DirecTV. But negotiations between News Corp and DirecTV proceeded slowly. A 25% decline in the stock of Hughes Electronics in February 2001 slowed down the talks further. In April 2001, Murdoch reduced his bid for a 30% stake and got Microsoft to commit $3 billion in cash for the deal. In August 2001, EchoStar surprised everyone by announcing an unsolicited $32.3 billion bid for DirecTV. EchoStar and DirecTV together controlled about 92% of the US satellite pay-TV market. Murdoch lobbied intensely and succeeded in getting the merger blocked on antitrust grounds. Finally in April 2003, News Corp acquired GM' s 19.9% stake in Hughes and a further 14.1% from public shareholders and GM' s pension and other benefit plans.

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