Following the news that Comcast has made a bid for Sky, a number of
industry observers have shared their thoughts on its implications for
the pay-TV sector with advanced-television.com.
According to MoffettNathanson’s Craig Moffett, for Comcast shareholders,
there is a mix of good and bad in the announcement of a topping bid for
Sky. “Unfortunately, the bad outweighs the good,” he suggests.
“The good is that Comcast would get additional distribution for NBCU
content in Europe, and some European content to distribute in the US.
And, because the deal is all cash, Comcast would (happily) increase
their leverage (to 3.0x EBITDA pro forma), which is something for which
their shareholders have been pleading for years. To be fair, however,
such benefits could in theory be achieved just as easily through
arms-length negotiations.”
“The bad is that the underlying technology here is satellite, and
Comcast will have to twist themselves into knots to explain why
satellite distribution won’t be just as obsolete in Europe as it already
is in the US. Notably, the word “‘satellite’ never even appears in the
investor presentation that accompanies this morning’s conference call,
almost as if they are hoping no one notices. Yes, Sky is more than just a
direct-to-home satellite TV distributor, but… well, let’s face it, Sky
is a direct-to-home satellite TV distributor. And yes, Sky is also a
broadband provider… but it is a resale broadband platform, not a
facilities-based one, and therefore it is one that, unlike in the US,
lacks any competitive advantage whatsoever.
“Perhaps worst of all, this morning’s bid doesn’t really put to rest the
idea that they might still try a topping bid for Fox’s US assets,
including the rest of Sky, if the AT&T/TWX deal is approved. The
notion that Comcast might make a topping bid for Fox has weighed heavily
on Comcast shares, which have entirely missed the market rebound in the
days since their continued interest was first reported. Expect that
overhang to remain.”
Meanwhile, Mohammed Hamza and Tony Lennoir, analysts at Kagan, the TMT
research arm of S&P Global Market Intelligence, say that Comcast’s
proposed acquisition would create the world’s second-largest pay TV
distributor while sharpening the Philadelphia heavyweight’s edge on the
content front, notably through valuable English Premier League rights —
one of the most valuable global sport franchises.
“Separate from Comcast’s international ambitions, the bid roils the
latest plans from the segment’s biggest players. The Sky assets are
already deeply intertwined with Walt Disney Co.’s bid to buy 21st
Century Fox Inc., and the Comcast offer is likely to elicit further
escalation from Disney,” they say.
“Although clearly both Comcast and Disney want Sky, Comcast has said it
will pursue a deal as long as it can acquire at least 50 per cent of
Sky. Thus, Comcast may allow Fox and eventually Disney to retain their
39 per cent stake, perhaps negotiating the final ownership structure of
Hulu LLC at the same time — Disney will own 60 per cent of Hulu after
the Fox acquisition and Comcast 30 per cent, with both parties said to
be interested in owning the company,” they note.
According to Kagan, the Comcast bid for Sky certainly gives the Murdochs
pause for thought regarding the existing Disney-Fox deal, especially
given Comcast’s £12.50-per-share bid for Sky, a 16 per cent premium on
Fox’s offer. Kagan believes the Comcast offer for Sky represents a more
attractive strategic alignment that brings together similar expansion
ambitions of two pay TV giants with diversified asset investments in
content ownership and distribution — Sky’s 119 TV networks in Europe and
Comcast’s NBCUniversal Media LLC ownership — as well as technology
including virtual reality, IP distribution, next-generation advertising
and over-the-top video. “From a European regulatory perspective, we
think the Disney deal would in any case resolve most if not all of the
regulatory issues as would a deal with Comcast buying Sky,” they
suggest.
“Following AT&T Inc.’s bid for Time Warner Inc. and Comcast’s own
programming stronghold with its acquisition of NBCU in 2009, the move
contributes to an increasingly vertically consolidated media landscape,”
they advise.
In terms of the bid’s financial implications, Comcast’s February 27th
bid to acquire Sky consists of £21.55 billion in equity, or £12.50 per
share, translating into $30.01 billion. With the assumption of
calculated net debt of £7.43 billion, or $10.35 billion, this values the
European media and telecommunications conglomerate at £28.98 billion
($40.36 billion) or 12.7x projected 2018 EBITDA — a multiple
significantly above US cable’s largest deals. For perspective, Disney
announced its bid for the Fox assets at 11.9x, 8.3x including synergies
and using a 30-day moving average. It was closer to 12.9x and 9.0x with
synergies when the deal was announced, before the stock’s significant
increase on deal rumours.
Charter Communications Inc.’s $77 billion acquisition of Time Warner
Cable Inc. in 2015, the largest US cable deal ever, was done at a
calculated 9.3x projected forward EBITDA. Altice NV’s acquisitions of
Suddenlink Communications and Cablevision Systems Corp., also announced
in 2015, fetched 9.3x and 9.4x multiples, respectively. The metric has
risen steadily in the US cable M&A market in the last two years,
however.
Based on public data and Kagan estimates, the annual weighted average
forward EBITDA multiple for U.S. cable M&A came in at 10.1x, the
metric’s highest level since 2005.
Three US cable deals were struck at forward EBITDA multiples in
double-digit territory in 2017: Cable One Inc.’s acquisition of NewWave
Communications (11.0x); TPG Capital’s purchase of Wave Broadband LLC
(12.3x); and the sale of the MetroCast systems to Canada-based, and
owner of Atlantic Broadband Group LLC, Cogeco Communications Inc.
(11.0x).
On a subscriber-valuation basis, Comcast’s offer for the Sky assets
comes in significantly below prevailing US metrics. Based on the
estimated enterprise value of $40.36 billion, which includes programming
assets, Comcast would be paying slightly more than $2,000 per Sky
multichannel subscriber. This compares to the average $6,985 per video
subscriber that Charter paid to acquire Time Warner Cable in 2015.
“Sky’s European pay TV assets cover 22.9 million customers across
Austria, Germany, Ireland, Italy and the U.K., including an estimated 20
million legacy multichannel subscribers. Sky is the largest pay-TV
platform in Europe with some of the region’s highest ARPU levels,
averaging $48.77 in the six months ended December 31st, 2017, based on
an average annual exchange rate for 2017,” they note.
“Comcast counted 22.4 million pay TV subscribers at the end of 2017 and a
stable of cable networks and the NBC (US) broadcast asset. A
combination with Sky would make Comcast the second-largest pay -TV
operator in the world, up from its current fourth position, behind only
China Telecom with 73.3 million pay-TV subs and ahead of AT&T with
38.9 million subscribers globally. The relatively high price for
satellite subscribers has raised eyebrows, particularly when compared
with the gloomy outlook for multichannel services when not paired with
wireline broadband,” they observe.
According to Kagan, a merger would, however, allow Comcast to flex its
programming muscle at a time when legacy multichannel distributors are
increasingly aiming for differentiation. The English Premier League,
England’s top-flight football league and one of the most (if not the
most) popular football leagues in the world, could very well be Sky’s
content crown jewel.
Sky in February agreed to pay £3.58 billion, or $4.98 billion, over
three years (effective beginning with the 2019-20 campaign) for the
rights to broadcast 128 EPL games per season, including every weekend
‘first pick’. Over the long run, Sky’s established relationship with the
EPL could prove extremely valuable in the perspective of an
international Comcast virtual-service-provider product.
“The underlying issue is how important the Sky assets are to Disney as a
basis for the Fox acquisition. Kagan believes the ideal outcome for all
involved would be Sky selling to Comcast and Disney taking on Fox minus
Sky,” conclude the analysts.
According to VideoAmp’s Chief Strategy Officer Jay Prasad, the frenetic
chess moves in the media industry have become a non-stop spectator sport
for those of nerds who live and breathe this daily! “This time you
literally have three of the most powerful moguls in the world involved,
Brian Roberts (Comcast) Bog Iger (Disney) and Rupert Murdock (Fox).
What’s at stake here is very layered and will definitely shape the
future of TV and advertising,” he states.
Prasad sees a number of strategic levers at play:
Disney is focusing on direct to consumer distribution and therefore
needs to get more TV and Film assets that will allow any offerings to
stand firm in a highly competitive market. This is why the FOX deal was
so important to Disney. These services are likely to remain
ad-supported, and likely will have a hybrid model of subscription as
well.
Comcast was also interested in FOX’s entertainment assets, that said
with ownership of all of NBCU there is already a massive content
footprint for Comcast. Fox’s ownership stake in SKY was a key reason
Comcast had bid for all of Fox’s assets in competition with Disney. So
the great chess move would be to go after the distribution assets that
SKY represents and is also very key for Comcast. They are first and
foremost a distribution and access provider and SKY gives them a massive
new footprint of paying customers and market coverage.
Control of HULU: Next year the consent decree that Comcast signed when
it acquired NBCU will be ending. Thus they would have active
decision-making power once again. If Disney acquires FOX, it will then
it will have overall control of HULU.
HULU is obviously a key player in OTT and that is a future that all of
the media players are competing with Netflix, Amazon, Google, and now
Apple in. The overall ad ecosystem needs a big and vibrant HULU to
remain in part ad-supported.
HULU is also running a live TV service that competes with Comcast and
other cable operators, so how all these moguls deal with that issue will
be very compelling.
Combination of Distribution and Content: This is an obvious diver for
these massive M&A deals. You need compelling storytelling and
content to fill up your pipes.
The other element here is the combination of Distribution + Data: The
actual battle against the FAANG giants is here. The 400B + Global TV and
Digital Video marketplace is being reshaped. Those who can target
granularly and operate across all screens will win. Right now the
traditional TV programmers have the least data, the distributors have
more, but less than the digital giants. These deals will put actual
customer data, viewership data, and ad tech assets in place that can
compete at scale.
So might Comcast be willing to concede Fox to Disney and thus control of
HULU for a bigger distribution footprint in International markets? This
would be a brilliant chess move to make that happen. Then does NBC stay
in HULU or will it pursue its own OTT services with Comcast and SKY?
Jason Bradwell, Director of Product Marketing at Massive Interactive,
suggest that in kicking off a bidding war for Sky, Comcast is about to
secure its place at the top of the OTT-first broadcaster league table.
“Although it would represent a huge up-front cost for the cable
operator, it’s one that’ll pay dividends almost immediately thanks to
the international headroom the deal would open up for the company,” he
predicts.
However, it’s also indicative of a shift to an OTT-first mentality from
the cable operator. With Sky recently announcing it’ll offer all of its
services via IP by 2019, and plans for aggressive growth into Europe,
Comcast is hedging its bets on securing prime position amongst a
generation of users that favour cord-cutting.”
“In bidding for Sky, Comcast is really bidding for an immediate global
footprint. That’s a given. But it’s also a move that’ll reshape
Comcast’s content delivery and growth potential at such a volatile time
in the industry. Deals like this will redefine the broadcast space as we
know it,” he concludes.