Selasa, 25 Oktober 2016

Disney may try to get even bigger to compete with merged AT&T-Time Warner - Los Angeles Times

With a market capitalization of $150 billion, Walt Disney Co.[1] is an entertainment behemoth.

But the Burbank-based company could soon find itself in an unfamiliar position: dwarfed.

If regulators approve AT&T's $85.4-billion acquisition[2] of Time Warner Inc.[3], the combined company would be far bigger than Disney and boast top-tier assets such as DirecTV, HBO[4] and Warner Bros.[5] That has spurred some industry observers to speculate on whether Disney might need to pursue a significant acquisition of its own in order to continue thriving in a rapidly changing media business.

"We are talking about huge scale economies," said Laura Martin, an analyst at Needham & Co. "There is even a question as to whether Disney will be big enough at $150 billion to compete on its own."

The company is no stranger to making a deal.

BamTech has been tapped by Disney to create and distribute a new ESPN[12]-branded, multisport subscription streaming service sold directly to consumers.

Moser said he didn't think making a landmark deal on the scale of the AT&T-Time Warner pact was in the best interest of Disney as it tries to solve issues at ESPN. The BamTech acquisition was seen in part by analysts as a way for Disney to address issues at the sports network, which has lost 9 million TV subscribers since 2013, according to Nielsen data.

"One of the biggest challenges for them is to figure out what the next step is for taking Disney over the top," Moser said. "The biggest item on [Iger's] to-do list is to figure out the ways to monetize ESPN via distribution."

Disney, which generated revenue of $52.5 billion in fiscal 2015, is now seen as too big to be acquired by all but a handful of companies. But more than a decade ago, it was the target of a mega-merger that ultimately failed. In 2004, cable provider Comcast Corp.[13] stunned Wall Street by offering $54 billion for Disney[14]

Disney rejected the bid, and Comcast, against the backdrop of much hand-wringing on Wall Street, abandoned its efforts to acquire the company soon thereafter.

About five years after Comcast failed to purchase Disney, it finally zeroed in on a media and entertainment titan, announcing its intent to buy a majority stake in NBCUniversal in 2009. At the time, there was significant concern over the implications of the deal for consumers and their pocketbooks. It was eventually approved by the Federal Communications Commission in 2011.

The AT&T-Time Warner deal could create a new company with a market capitalization of more than $300 billion and is therefore expected to receive intense scrutiny by regulators. Competitors � �� including Disney — have already weighed in on the matter.

On Saturday, a Disney spokeswoman told several news outlets that "a transaction of this magnitude obviously warrants very close regulatory scrutiny."

See the most-read stories in Entertainment this hour »[15]

Staff writer Meg James contributed to this report.

daniel.miller@latimes.com[16]

Follow @DanielNMiller[17] on Twitter for film business news.

 

 

ALSO

If AT&T swallows Time Warner, who might be gobbled up next?[18]

Wall Street worries that regulators will sink AT&T-Time Warner deal[19]

The rise of the small screen is what's driving AT&T's $85.4-billion deal for Time Warner[20]

AT&T says it plans to keep top Time Warner managers[21]

The AT&T-Time Warner deal would be a disaster for the public interest[22]

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