By Staff
TVNewsCheck, May
2, 2017 8:23 AM EDT
21st Century Fox's plan to form a joint venture with
Blackstone to buy Tribune Media would create value from cost synergies and by
putting Fox into six more NFL markets, says the securities research firm.
What's more, it blocks Sinclair from acquiring the Tribune stations — a move
that would boost Sinclair's national programming ambitions and get it more
leverage in reverse comp dealings.
Fox's
unconfirmed plan to form a joint venture with the Blackstone private equity
firm to buy Tribune Media and form a super group comprising Tribune's Fox
affiliates and Fox's O&Os makes sense from "an offensive and defensive
point of view," securities research MoffettNathanson says in a note to
clients.
The Financial Times first reported the plan yesterday with neither Fox nor
Tribune commenting.
According
to MoffettNathanson, the joint venture would likely keep only Tribune's 14 Fox
affiliates, spinning off 28 others, including ABC, NBC and CBS affiliates and
major-market CW affiliates.
"Offensively,
first, [the deal] would take a growing asset off [Fox's] books and move it
below the line," although it would complicate its financial reporting, the
note says. "Second, the deal would protect Fox from the volatile local ad
market. Third, Fox would create incremental value not only from cost synergies
combining two station portfolios, but more importantly gaining exposure to many
key NFL markets," including Seattle, Milwaukee, Denver, Cleveland,
Indianapolis and San Diego.
The
deal makes sense defensively because it keep Tribune's stations out of the
hands of the Sinclair Broadcast Group, which is also interested in acquiring
them, the note says.
"Sinclair
might decide to start a competing Fox News Channel or even go further to create
a new national network by buying the next set of NFL rights when they come due
in a few years, essentially using Fox’s own playbook.
Also, the combination of Tribune and Sinclair would create a
behemoth that owns 68 individual Fox affiliates which could up-end the favorable
pro-network dynamics of the current reverse retrans
marketplace. However, note that Fox also holds the right to block any
change in Fox affiliation when there is a change in ownership."
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