AT&T said in talks to buy DirecTV for About $50 billion:
New York: AT&T Inc., joining the ranks of US TV, Internet and wireless providers racing to consolidate, is in advanced talks to acquire DirecTV for about $50 billion, according to people familiar with the matter.
“Under the plan being discussed, management of DirecTV, the largest
US satellite-TV provider, will continue to run the company as a unit of
AT&T,” said the people, asking not to be named because the
information is private. “DirecTV chief executive officer Mike White plans to retire after 2015,” the people said.
The purchase would give AT&T a national satellite-TV
provider to combine with its wireless, phone and high-speed broadband
Internet services as competition ramps up. The pool of pay-TV customers
is peaking in the US because viewers are increasingly watching video
online, and the combination would keep DirecTV from being on its own
with just a TV offering and no competitive Internet package.
“With DirecTV they are getting a national TV presence—they can sell TV with wireless nationwide,” said Roger Entner,
an analyst with Recon Analytics, based in Dedham, Massachusetts.
“AT&T has increasingly been breaking out of their 22-state landline
footprint. They sell wireless, they started selling home security and
they could add TV to that package.”
“The deal is more than a week away from being completed,”
said another person familiar with the matter, who added the sides were
still in talks on a price which could come in close to $95 a share,
depending on how much cash or stock is in the transaction. “The person
said White’s departure was also still being negotiated. The price could
go as high as $100 a share,” two other people said.
Latin America
DirecTV rose 5.9% to $92.30 in late trading, after earlier closing regular trading at $87.16.
AT&T would be getting a pay-TV business that’s
expanding in Latin America and generating higher monthly bills from US
customers. DirecTV’s exclusive content includes the National Football
League Sunday Ticket package and products such as Genie, a multiroom
digital video recorder.
Comcast Corp.’s plan to acquire Time Warner Cable Inc.
(TWC)—to create an even bigger provider of both TV and Internet in the
US—is accelerating the drive for consolidation in the rest of the
industry. In March, AT&T chief executive officer Randall Stephenson called the Time Warner Cable takeover an “industry-redefining deal.”
Regulatory approval
The question with all of these potential tie-ups is
whether regulators will allow them. Comcast’s takeover of Time Warner
Cable hasn’t been approved yet. A merger of DirecTV and Dish Network Corp. (DISH) was blocked more than a decade ago, and AT&T had to abandon a purchase of T-Mobile US Inc. several years ago in the face of antitrust opposition.
“DirecTV and AT&T are planning on a 12-month regulatory process to review the deal,” one of the people said.
“If regulators let Comcast buy Time Warner Cable, there’s
no reason they wouldn’t let AT&T buy DirecTV,” Entner said. “They
have to see it as part of a holistic market.”
Getting ownership of DirecTV’s Latin American units would cause a conflict for AT&T, which holds an 8% stake in America Movil SAB
(AMXL)—a direct competitor to DirecTV in countries including Brazil and
Colombia. DirecTV’s Latin America operation includes Mexico, where it
has a minority stake in Sky Mexico, controlled by Grupo Televisa SAB, one of America Movil’s biggest rivals.
DirecTV had also drawn merger interest from Dish chairman Charlie Ergen,
people with knowledge of the matter said in March. While a DirecTV
merger is tempting, the satellite-TV rival is too expensive to pursue,
Ergen said last week on a conference call to discuss first-quarter
earnings.
Debt funding
“If DTV is willing to sell for $100 then it must be
either concerned about its lack of broadband long term, worried about
the viability of a Dish merger, or both,” Philip Cusick, an analyst at JPMorgan Chase and Co., wrote in a research note.
Darris Gringeri, a DirecTV spokesman, declined to comment as did Brad Burns, an AT&T spokesman. The Wall Street Journal reported earlier that AT&T is planning a stock and cash bid for DirecTV, without specifying the price.
AT&T can afford to add about $16 billion in debt to
fund the DirecTV deal without risking a credit-rating downgrade,
according to Erich Marriott,
an analyst with Bloomberg Industries. The company is rated A3 by
Moody’s Investors Service and A- at Standard and Poor’s, both four
levels above junk.
Stock portion
Adding $16 billion of debt would keep AT&T’s ratio of
debt to earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization
below 2.5, the level at which credit ratings agencies have said may
trigger a downgrade, Marriott wrote in a research note. The analysis
assumes deal synergies of about 10%.
That implies that AT&T will need to offer a
significant portion of stock to fund the $50 billion acquisition. The
company has about $3.6 billion of cash and near-cash items and two
revolving credit agreements with a combined $8 billion available,
according to a regulatory filing.
“We were thinking AT&T would want to use as much debt
as they can and that the deal could be all cash,” said John Hodulik, an
analyst with UBS AG. “But that would mean the leverage would be about
2.7, and that’s too high. I think they’d prefer 2.5 leverage.”
Jawed Iqbal
PGDM- 2nd sem
Source: Livemint
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