Comcast Offers To Shed 3.9 Million Subscribers To Ease Cable Deal

DEAD7

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"In a bid to win regulatory approval for its proposed $45 billion takeover of Time Warner Cable, Comcast has offered to sell 1.4 million pay TV subscribers to Charter Communications for $7.3 billion. From the article: 'Comcast also said it would divest another 2.5 million subscribers into a new publicly traded company, dubbed SpinCo for now, to be one-third owned by Charter and two-thirds owned by Comcast shareholders. The deal will make Charter — whose own bid for Time Warner Cable was thwarted by Comcast's higher offer — the second-biggest U.S. pay TV company with 5.7 million customers, overtaking Cox Communications Inc.'"
 

Yapdatfool

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Comcast offers to divest customers to win TWC approval
By Liana B. Baker and Soham Chatterjee

Mon Apr 28, 2014 11:05am EDT

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A Comcast sign is shown on the side of a vehicle in San Francisco, California February 13, 2014.

Credit: Reuters/Robert Galbraith


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n">(Reuters) - Comcast Corp offered to sell 1.4 million pay TV subscribers to Charter Communications Inc for $7.3 billion as part of a transaction aimed at winning regulatory approval for its proposed $45 billion takeover of Time Warner Cable.

Comcast also said it would divest another 2.5 million subscribers into a new publicly traded company, dubbed SpinCo for now, to be one-third owned by Charter and two-thirds by Comcast shareholders.

The deal would make Charter - whose own bid for Time Warner Cable was thwarted by Comcast's higher offer - the second-biggest U.S. pay TV company with 5.7 million customers, overtaking Cox Communications Inc.

Charter's shares rose as much as 10 percent to $142.70 in early trading on Monday. Comcast shares were up 1.4 percent at

$51.70.

Comcast would have less than 30 percent of the U.S. residential cable or satellite TV market after the deal, the company said in a statement.

The agreement is contingent on Comcast's Time Warner Cable deal being approved by the Justice Department and the U.S. Federal Communications Commission, a process that could take many months.

Analysts said the deal was a pre-emptive move by Comcast ahead of a review of the deal by regulators.

"Comcast wanted to do this deal now with Charter so it could get in front of regulators at the Justice Department and the FCC at the same time as the Time Warner Cable deal," a source familiar with the matter said.

The source said there was a standstill agreement with Charter stipulating that it cannot gain full control of SpinCo for four years. Comcast will have no ownership in SpinCo.

SpinCo would have an estimated enterprise value of $14.3 billion and an equity value of $5.8 billion, Charter and Comcast said in an investor presentation. (r.reuters.com/vyd88v)

The divestments, mostly in the U.S. Midwest, would deliver about $19.5 billion in value to Comcast shareholders, the companies said.

"For Charter, this deal is a transformative event and sets them up over time to consolidate the balance of the rest of the cable industry," Pivotal Research Group analyst Jeff Wlodarczak told Reuters, adding that the deal was good for both parties.

MORE CLOUT FOR MALONE

Charter's deal with Comcast marks an acceleration of John Malone's effective return to cable through his investment vehicle Liberty Media Corp, which owns about 27 percent of Charter, Wlodarczak said.

Liberty Media got involved in working with Comcast but Charter did the nuts and bolts of the deal, the source said.

Cable pioneer Malone, who set up the largest cable operator in the United States before selling it to AT&T in 1999, returned to the U.S. cable market with Liberty's investment in Charter in March 2013.

In addition to the divestments, Charter and Comcast will swap about 1.6 million customers.

Charter will get the Detroit and Minneapolis-St. Paul markets, the companies said in the presentation.

Comcast will get parts of the Los Angeles, New York state, western Massachusetts, North and South Carolina and parts of Texas and Georgia markets.

Time Warner Cable had 11.2 million residential video subscribers as of March 31, while Comcast had 22.6 million.

Charter, which also reported better-than-expected first-quarter revenue, said it expected to fund the purchase of 1.4 million customers through debt.

Time Warner Cable shares were up 1 percent at $141.01.

(Additional reporting by Abhirup Roy and Sruthi Ramakrishnan in Bangalore; Editing by Saumyadeb Chakrabarty)

So, give 8 billion to make 19 billion...

This merger still doesn't make sense to me, just why?? I would've thought TWC wasn't hurting that badly. Both companies share prices are through the roof, they're bringing in billions in revenue and they each have their own market monopolies throughout the US, so what's the point of this buyout??
 

Lord Beasley

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i had no idea you could sell subscribers:ohhh:

i also have no business sense but, if i were in charge of Charter, i'd flat out reject that proposal. Comcast is run by demons
 

ORDER_66

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Still sounds like bulshyt... They take over time warner, they take over a lions share of the pie. it aint fukking fair. its a damn near monopoly.
 

Mr. Somebody

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i had no idea you could sell subscribers:ohhh:

i also have no business sense but, if i were in charge of Charter, i'd flat out reject that proposal. Comcast is run by demons
You sell subscribers by taking an area controlled by one provider and saying *ok everyone in this city now has to switch to charter on this date*
 
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