It looks offical, D* sold to Liberty

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Looks like it's finally happened, http://home.businesswire.com/portal...d=news_view&newsId=20061222005244&newsLang=en ,

http://www.newswire.ca/en/releases/archive/December2006/22/c2014.html

http://www.cnbc.com/id/16325600

plus it's been on CNBC this morning.

IMHO, I don't think this will effect D*'s HD plans since the sats are already built/being built and launch contracts signed. But maybe retention won't be able to offer all those free deals for new STB's that they're know for making with customers.
 
AP
http://biz.yahoo.com/ap/061222/news_corp_liberty_directv.html?.v=4

News Corp. Swaps DirecTV With Liberty
Friday December 22, 9:39 am ET
News Corp. Swaps DirecTV Stake With Liberty; Deal Settles Dispute Between Murdoch and Malone


NEW YORK (AP) -- Rupert Murdoch's News Corp. will swap its controlling stake in the satellite TV broadcaster DirecTV Group Inc. with Liberty Media Corp. in exchange for Liberty's 16 percent stake in News Corp., the companies announced Friday.
The deal settles a long-simmering dispute between Murdoch, News Corp.'s chairman and CEO, and Liberty's Chairman John Malone, who surprised Murdoch two years ago by suddenly building up a large stake in the global media conglomerate that Murdoch built.

Under the deal, which had been expected, News Corp. will give Liberty its 38.4 percent stake in DirecTV, three regional sports cable networks and $550 million in cash.

In return, News Corp. will receive Liberty's entire stake in News Corp., which is worth 16.3 percent of the company's value. News Corp. said in a statement that the deal will amount to a buyback of about $11 billion of its own stock.
 
It will be interesting to see who is in control of DirecTV at CES, as I am supposed to meet with DirecTV President Chase Carey at CES regarding a number of issues.
 
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According to SkyReport Chase Carey will still be the CEO and President
I read the same thing! It seems the only seats that will be replaced on the Board are those that was occupied by NewCorp members, Liberty will be placing their staff in those spots!
 
http://biz.yahoo.com/ap/061222/news_corp_liberty_directv.html?.v=10

News Corp. Swaps DirecTV Stake With Liberty; Deal Settles Dispute Between Murdoch and Malone

NEW YORK (AP) -- Rupert Murdoch's News Corp. will swap its controlling stake in the satellite TV broadcaster DirecTV Group Inc. with Liberty Media Corp. in exchange for Liberty's 16 percent stake in News Corp., the companies announced Friday.

The deal settles a long-simmering dispute between Murdoch, News Corp.'s chairman and CEO, and Liberty's Chairman John Malone, who surprised Murdoch two years ago by suddenly building up a large stake in the global media conglomerate that Murdoch built.

Under the deal, which had been expected, News Corp. will give Liberty its 38.4 percent stake in DirecTV, three regional sports cable networks and $550 million in cash.

In return, News Corp. will receive Liberty's entire stake in News Corp., which is worth 16.3 percent of the company's value. News Corp. said in a statement that the deal will amount to a buyback of about $11 billion of its own stock.

The deal is subject to various regulatory approvals and must also be approved by a majority of the holders of News Corp.'s Class B voting shares, excluding the Murdoch family and Liberty.

With the deal with Liberty complete, News Corp. said it expected to cancel its "poison pill" antitakeover measure, which had faced objections from shareholders. News Corp. also said it would consider eliminating its staggered board, in which not all of the company's directors stand for election each year.

Discussions between News Corp. and Liberty had been dragging on for months, and other possible scenarios for exchanging Liberty's stake had also emerged. By arranging the exchange as a swap of assets instead of a purchase, both sides will avoid enormous tax bills.

The tensions between Murdoch and Malone dated back to 2004, when Malone -- a cable industry pioneer and a longtime powerhouse in media investing -- surprised Murdoch by taking advantage of active trading in News Corp. stock as it relocated its headquarters from Australia to the United States to quickly accumulate a large voting stake in the company.

Malone's stake is currently worth about 16 percent of News Corp., but since many of the shares are the Class B voting shares, Malone's voting power was about 19 percent, potentially rivaling the Murdoch family's voting power of about 30 percent.

In addition to the 38.4 percent stake in DirecTV, Liberty will also receive three regional sports networks -- FSN Northwest, FSN Pittsburgh, and FSN Rocky Mountain.

For News Corp., the deal with Liberty removes a potential threat to the Murdoch family's control of the company, a major global media conglomerate that includes the Twentieth Century Fox movie and TV studio; the Fox broadcast network; the Fox News Channel and FX cable networks; a large portfolio of newspapers in the United Kingdom and Australia as well as the New York Post; and the social networking site MySpace.

For Liberty, the deal further simplifies a complex financial structure for the Englewood, Colo.-based company, which holds stakes in a number of other companies, and gives it another operating business to run. Liberty owns the home shopping network QVC and the pay TV channel Starz. DirecTV has 15.6 million subscribers.

Liberty shares rose $3.21, or more than 3 percent, to $96.85 in morning trading on the Nasdaq Stock Market. News Corp. shares rose 13 cents to $21.71 on the New York Stock Exchange.
 
Bloomberg reported it a done deal on Monday.

I reported it here :)


AP
http://biz.yahoo.com/ap/061222/news_corp_liberty_directv.html?.v=4

News Corp. Swaps DirecTV With Liberty
Friday December 22, 9:39 am ET
News Corp. Swaps DirecTV Stake With Liberty; Deal Settles Dispute Between Murdoch and Malone


NEW YORK (AP) -- Rupert Murdoch's News Corp. will swap its controlling stake in the satellite TV broadcaster DirecTV Group Inc. with Liberty Media Corp. in exchange for Liberty's 16 percent stake in News Corp., the companies announced Friday.
The deal settles a long-simmering dispute between Murdoch, News Corp.'s chairman and CEO, and Liberty's Chairman John Malone, who surprised Murdoch two years ago by suddenly building up a large stake in the global media conglomerate that Murdoch built.

Under the deal, which had been expected, News Corp. will give Liberty its 38.4 percent stake in DirecTV, three regional sports cable networks and $550 million in cash.

In return, News Corp. will receive Liberty's entire stake in News Corp., which is worth 16.3 percent of the company's value. News Corp. said in a statement that the deal will amount to a buyback of about $11 billion of its own stock.
 
Bloomberg Jumped the gun (and a few other places reported it a done deal a few weeks ago.

Today was the official announcement.
 
Changes in management after a merger often take awhile. keeping Chase Carey aat least for now makes sense/ It was unlikely that anyone else would be in that position before CES.
 
While there probably won't be a ton of changes right off (not until Liberty has control, mid-year), I suspect that there will be a number of changes down the road, including the management team.

Unfortunately, the lease model doesn't seem likely to be one of them, as Liberty is quite comfortable with that model. I can't feel like this is going to be good news, either for subscribers or those in the industry who make money from DirecTV (not that there are that many left of the latter).
 
When contact renewal talks come up again for the FOX owned programmers, it will be interesting to see if Liberty and Fox can agree. It also will be interesting to see if Liberty will still go forward with the planned launch of the new sat's next year as well.
 
They better, if not DirecTV will become Dish, making vaporware and promices then, for no good reason not following through on them, or announcing a new feature that never comes.
 
What do y'all think of this:

All that said, UBS analyst Aryeh Bourkoff is thinking ahead to AT&T’s next deal. In a report issued late yesterday, Bourkoff asserts that AT&T could back away from its Lightspeed IPTV project and switch its focus to a satellite strategy for delivering television programming to its customers.

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