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raj2001
12-18-02, 07:03 PM
http://www.latimes.com/la-fi-directv18dec18,0,7203948.story



Rupert Murdoch and John Malone are gearing up for a second run at DirecTV, but this time as 50-50 partners, sources said, an unexpected change that reflects their different agendas as they pursue the nation's leading satellite TV provider.

Top executives of Murdoch's News Corp. are scheduled to discuss a new deal in New York today with representatives of General Motors Corp., which owns DirecTV through its El Segundo-based subsidiary, Hughes Electronics Corp. Sources close to the companies said the meeting is a preliminary one and may not cover such details as price and structure.

But it will be the first since News Corp., with $500 million in financial backing from Malone's Liberty Media Corp., lost a bidding war for Hughes a year ago to EchoStar Communications Corp. GM put DirecTV back on the auction block last week, after the EchoStar merger was abandoned in the face of opposition by federal regulators.

Murdoch has long craved DirecTV, seeing it as the missing link in News Corp.'s worldwide satellite operation, which spans from China, through Asia and continental Europe, to Latin America.

Even before the EchoStar-Hughes deal was scrapped, News Corp. had amassed a war chest this year big enough for a solo bid should DirecTV become available again. Still, some on Wall Street say the company's balance sheet would be less strained with Malone's help.

Less clear has been Malone's motivation, especially Liberty Media's insistence that it would pursue Hughes even without Murdoch.

Liberty is mostly a collection of media investments managed by a mogul better known for his ruthless opportunism and clever financial engineering than his operational prowess.

"Everyone is trying to figure out why Liberty is so adamant about owning DirecTV ... it's not immediately obvious what strategic benefits Liberty gets," said Merrill Lynch analyst Jessica Reif Cohen.

But those close to Malone say there is a logical explanation for his proposed 50-50 structure. Although he was content last time around to be a silent partner, they say, the Denver mogul is now being driven by concerns over how Liberty is regulated.

Because so many of Liberty's assets are minority investments rather than controlling positions in operating companies, Malone is said to be worried that securities regulators could reclassify it as a mutual fund, triggering undesirable tax consequences and preventing it from hedging its positions by using financial instruments such as derivatives.

"Liberty has always danced close to the edge of being ranked as a mutual fund," said one executive close to the situation. "It's been an ongoing concern."

Sources said Malone hopes to free Liberty from the regulatory uncertainty through two upcoming transactions in which it would have control powers. Hughes is one of those deals.

The other, word of which first surfaced this summer, would see Liberty emerge as the single largest stockholder in a new company that would hold the U.S. entertainment operations of Vivendi Universal, including its Hollywood studios, theme parks and the recording label.

Under one scenario being discussed, Liberty would contribute its 100%-owned Starz Encore Group, valued by Wall Street at about $5 billion; its 3% stake in Vivendi; and cash in exchange for an equity position of about 30% in the new company, sources said. Malone's partner in such a deal, some say, would be Barry Diller, co-chief executive of the Universal assets and chairman of USA Interactive Inc. Malone is a major shareholder of USA Interactive.

However, it's far from certain that Vivendi will be willing to go along with Malone's plan. Billionaire Marvin Davis has made his own offer for the entertainment assets, and other bidders also are likely to surface.

Liberty Chief Executive Robert Bennett has portrayed the DirecTV deal's merits as financial, arguing that the asset is undervalued and on the verge of turning cash-flow positive.

As for Liberty's need for joint control with News Corp., company officials said the strategy is in keeping with a promise to shareholders in the wake of a spate of disappointing minority investments since 2000 that have decimated Liberty's stock value.

"Our shareholders are more comfortable if we have control or significant influence over the outcome," said Liberty spokesman Michael Erickson. "We want to control our destiny."

Liberty shares have fallen 68% from a peak in early 2000, as media and technology stocks have plunged and a couple of the companies in which Liberty invested have come under investigation or filed for bankruptcy protection.

So far, News Corp. seems to be giving Malone what he wants.

The two companies are talking about giving Liberty board representation and governance powers equal to News Corp.'s, according to sources close to the situation.

Liberty and News Corp. each would put up half of the estimated $5 billion that Wall Street says it would cost for GM's 30% controlling stake in Hughes.

Malone, however, is keeping his options open.

One source said he will not be represented at today's meeting because he wants to retain rights for his company to pursue Hughes on its own should News Corp. not agree to all his conditions.

Neither Malone nor Murdoch returned calls seeking comment. GM officials could not be reached for comment.

Liberty once controlled an enviable array of cable programming. But since the mid-1990s, it has exchanged many of these holdings for minority positions in the world's largest media giants. For instance, Liberty sold its 20% stake in Turner Broadcasting System to Time Warner and now owns 4% of AOL Time Warner Inc.

Malone sold Murdoch his 50% stake in their sports joint venture as well as a 22% interest in Gemstar-TV Guide International Inc.

Liberty now owns 18% of News Corp., slightly less than Murdoch's own 20% in equity.

platinum
12-18-02, 07:13 PM
I'll take Rupert over Charlie anyday.

raj2001
12-18-02, 08:06 PM
Originally posted by platinum
I'll take Rupert over Charlie anyday.

Me too.

sticks
12-18-02, 08:26 PM
me three

DCSholtis
12-18-02, 09:58 PM
This I think is GREAT news guys...Hopefully with Rupert in charge....possibly he could knock some sense into Comcast and maybe do a deal.......Who knows....Thats why Im excited as hell for this.

platinum
12-18-02, 10:18 PM
I think Rupert is a excellent business man who will make Directv thrive.

lee120
12-19-02, 11:36 AM
me four

rowdymon
12-19-02, 10:54 PM
Say buh-bye to HDTV then.

Jacob S
12-20-02, 10:52 PM
Dish will still have HDTV, just because DirecTv may not have it don't mean that it will not be available.

t2
12-20-02, 11:12 PM
I could not agree w/ you more. Anything's better than the current group of idiot savantes. BRING ON RUPERT!!

Art Vanderley
12-21-02, 06:56 AM
Rupert & Charlie are saints compared to John Malone.... DTV subs will long rue the day that Malone gets his hands on it.

Expect higher prices, lower PQ and almost non existent customer service levels - they could rename it "Sky Cable" because that's what it will be.

raj2001
12-21-02, 07:37 AM
Originally posted by Art Vanderley
Expect higher prices, lower PQ and almost non existent customer service levels - they could rename it "Sky Cable" because that's what it will be.

Didn't Charlie promise higher prices to Dish subs post merger too? And isn't he dropping NESN and TNT?

raj2001
12-21-02, 07:38 AM
Originally posted by Jacob S
Dish will still have HDTV, just because DirecTv may not have it don't mean that it will not be available.

Nobody is saying DirecTV will not have HDTV. Rupert may be anti HDTV but if he wants to keep his HDTV customers I don't think he'll take it away.

PSB
12-21-02, 09:53 AM
Rupert Rocks!

mnassour
12-28-02, 07:39 PM
With all due respect to everyone here, anyone who welcomes the reign of Prince Rupert has absolutely no idea of this man's history.

This is the man who almost lost the Fox network four years after it first aired due to his financial wheelings and dealings. It took a late night conference call with a number of American banks to save Fox...and Rupert's bacon.

This is the man who has forbidden Fox to broadcast in HDTV. What do you dozen or so DirecTV subscribers with HDTV units think will happen there? What do you think will be more important...HDNet or six more highly compressed channels of Fox Sports?

This is the man who has single-handledly disassembled one of my favorite TV stations, the old LBJ-owned KTBC in Austin. Once a major CBS affiliate, it is now refered to by employees as "the starvation station of the nation". In a TV market where unemployment is high, KTBC cannot fill positions because it pays scant above minimum wage.

This is the man who gave up his Australian citizenship because of an FCC ruling. Don't anyone think for a moment that he has any great love for the United States. He simply raised his right hand so that he could own TV stations here.

And those of you who welcome Murdoch should remember that News Corporation has a very similar corporate culture to another company that you love to hate....Echostar. No, News execs don't have to room together, but he squeezes the cent just as tightly as does Charlie. Only when Rupert squeezes, it's not the execs that suffer...it's equipment budgets that shrink.

One thing Murdoch will not do is lose money over an extended period of time without seeing the light at the end of the tunnel. He will engage in vicious price wars in the short term, run his competition into the ground, then jack up rates.

This is exactly what cable does. It's no surprise that John Malone is involved in this fiasco. How many of you fled screaming from TCI-run cable systems? How many of you stayed with those systems when AT&T took over hoping things would get better, only to find out that they were so run-down, that even AT&T couldn't fix them?

And for those of you who are willing to sell your precious DirecTV to this cheapskate, may I suggest you visit --

http://www.sky.com

Look at the dreck there that passes for programming. It would make a Canadian long for ExpressVu.

This is your future people....may those of you who wish for Murdoch...get him.

As for me, I'll run my UTVs until the day they drop or the compression gets so bad I can't stand it...and then put the C-band dish back up.