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Old 10-01-2009, 03:29 AM   #1
DetroitSportsFan DetroitSportsFan is offline
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Default Comcast to buy NBC/Universal?

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Comcast, the nation’s leading provider of cable, entertainment and communications products and services, is in talks to buy the entertainment giant NBC-Universal from General Electric, according to knowledgeable individuals.

Deal points were hammered out at a meeting among bankers for both sides in New York on Tuesday, executives familiar with the meeting said.

Two individuals informed about the meeting said that a deal had already been completed at a purchase price of $35 billion.

A spokeswoman for NBC-Universal had no comment. Comcast responded with this statement: “While we do not normally comment on M&A rumors, the report that Comcast has a deal to purchase NBC Universal is inaccurate.”

NBC-Universal has been believed to be in play for months, although GE has publicly denied any intention of selling the unit. In recent weeks, minority stakeholder Vivendi has been apparently preparing to exercise its right to sell 20 percent of the entertainment company in an IPO.

Comcast has been among those rumored to be interested in buying that equity.

But the Tuesday meeting was about a much larger gambit, according to the knowledgeable individuals. The NBC-Universal division of GE, a premium content company, is a likely fit for the cable giant with its massive distribution pipeline. That is especially the case when the division's potential price tag has dropped significantly from a year ago.

Comcast’s market cap is $48.44 billion. NBC-Universal has fallen in value to an estimated $35 billion in value, from about $55 billion a year ago.

Other suitors have been rumored to be interested in NBC-Universal, including Time Warner. Time Warner has denied any interest in a purchase.

The talks come after a rough summer for Universal Pictures, which had one of the worst box office runs in the studio’s recent past. And NBC has remained mired in fourth place among broadcast networks.

The message transmitted at a tense board meeting in New York in July -- where top NBC-Universal executives including Jeff Zucker (pictured above; at right, Comcast Chairman and CEO Brian Roberts), Ron Meyer, Marc Shmuger and David Linde all met with GE’s CEO Jeff Immelt and Vivendi representatives -- was that something had better change soon.

Earnings at the studio have been down drastically from last year for the second quarter in a row. Judd Apatow’s “Funny People" only brought in $60 million worldwide, while “Bruno" brought in the same amount domestically. On the Will Ferell comedy “Land of the Lost," Universal lost some $40 million.

General Electric originally purchased NBC for $6.28 billion in 1985, and in May 2004, merged with Vivendi -- which owned Universal Studios and cable channels, USA, Bravo and Sci-Fi.

At the time, NBC had been the only big TV network that wasn't a part of a media conglomerate and did not have its own production studio before the two companies joined.

Vivendi got $3.4 billion in cash as a part of the deal, and GE assumed $1.7 billion in debt from Vivendi.

GE took an 80 percent stake in the company and left the remaining 20 percent to Vivendi.

Under the terms of the 2004 deal, Vivendi can has the right to sell its stake, but it can only exercise its option each year from Nov. 15 though the Friday of the first full week of December.

Comcast continues on a spree of its own.

In 2001, it took on the assets of AT&T Broadband for $44.5 billion. The companies merged and retained the Comcast name.

In February 2004, the company made an $66 billion bid for the Walt Disney Company. That bid was rejected, but late that year, Comcast entered in a deal with Sony Pictures Entertainment to buy MGM and its affiliate studio United Artists.

The deal allows Comcast to carry the studios' material on cable and online.

Comcast also operates E! Entertainment Television.

A top executive at a major conglomerate hadn't heard about the talks until TheWrap broke the news on Wednesday evening. "But it does make some sense," he said. "They (Comcast) have always wanted to be in content business -- and now more than ever with their TV Everywhere experiments. Longshot-- (but) it isn't crazy."

Comcast and Time Warner recently began experimenting with a plan to give cable subscribers premium access to TV content online. The hope is to encourage consumers to use their Comcast or Time Warner broadband services to watch shows on the cable companies' streaming services, rather than outside networks such as Hulu. NBC, of course is a partner in Hulu, so it's unclear just how TV Everywhere would mesh with Comcast's potential purchase of the Peacock.
http://www.thewrap.com/article/exclu...ic-8002?page=2
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Old 10-01-2009, 03:34 AM   #2
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Not like NBC really has anything good on their channel anyway. I think Leno's new show is their best performer.
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Old 10-01-2009, 03:42 AM   #3
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Originally Posted by mikejet View Post
Not like NBC really has anything good on their channel anyway. I think Leno's new show is their best performer.
This possible deal also means a little studio called Universal Pictures.
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Old 10-01-2009, 04:32 AM   #4
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Great we will never see Scarface or Mobsters on Blu.
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Old 10-01-2009, 04:50 AM   #5
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This possible deal also means a little studio called Universal Pictures.
That's ok with me. It would mean that they show movies sooner than other cable providers on demand and ppv. No big deal.
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Old 10-01-2009, 08:49 PM   #6
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Probably no big deal, but I would think Comcast would be a company interested in digital downloads taking off. And having one of the major studios in their back pocket could help them out.
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Old 10-01-2009, 08:51 PM   #7
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Originally Posted by DetroitSportsFan View Post
Probably no big deal, but I would think Comcast would be a company interested in digital downloads taking off. And having one of the major studios in their back pocket could help them out.
With the way they want to throttle bandwidth, I'd have to claim the opposite.

Logan
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Old 10-01-2009, 08:55 PM   #8
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Originally Posted by jadedeath View Post
With the way they want to throttle bandwidth, I'd have to claim the opposite.

Logan
Yeah they would put more effort into On Demand and accessibility through the cable box.
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Old 10-01-2009, 10:16 PM   #9
Lord_Stewie Lord_Stewie is offline
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Comcast denies that there is such a deal.

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NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Comcast Corp. has denied news reports that it was hammering out a deal to buy entertainment giant NBC Universal from its parent General Electric.

Reports first started surfacing late Wednesday that the two companies were in talks. According to Web site TheWrap, a $35 billion deal had already been completed.

But Comcast refuted the reports. "While we do not normally comment on [mergers and acquisitions] rumors, the report that Comcast has a deal to purchase NBC Universal is inaccurate," Comcast spokeswoman Jennifer Khoury told CNN.

A GE spokesman declined to comment.

The fate of NBC Universal -- which includes the NBC television network, Universal Pictures and the Universal theme parks -- has been the target of intensifying speculation recently. French telecom giant Vivendi, which bought a 20% stake in NBC Universal in 2004, has reportedly mulled its option to sell.

Under the deal's original terms, Vivendi has the annual right to divest its stake during a three-week window starting Nov. 15 each year.

Vivendi Chief Executive Jean-Bernard Lévy has publicly described the stake in NBC Universal as a "non-core asset."

GE (GE, Fortune 500) owns the remaining 80% of NBC Universal. GE originally acquired NBC in 1985, paying just $6.28 billion. In May 2004, NBC and Vivendi Universal merged to form NBC Universal.

The unit has been struggling lately. NBC Universal reported a 41% drop in second-quarter profit to $539 million. Excluding a $95 million writdown and a one-time gain in the 2008 quarter, the company said its profit would have dropped only 24% from the year-earlier period.

Revenue slumped 8% to $3.6 billion during the quarter.

Comcast (CMCSA, Fortune 500), the largest U.S. cable company, failed in an unsolicited bid to buy Walt Disney Co (DIS, Fortune 500). for $54 billion in 2004. The deal would have created the world's biggest media company.

Shares of Comcast were down about 2% premarket, while GE's stock was flat.

-- CNN's Cheryl Robinson contributed to this report.

First Published: October 1, 2009: 7:11 AM ET
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