Disney nearing a deal to sell its India operations

Haymarket

Well-Known Member
Original Poster
Disney nears deal to sell $10-bln valued India business to Reliance -Bloomberg News

Reuters

October 23, 20236:23 AM PDT

BENGALURU, Oct 23 (Reuters) - Disney (DIS.N) is nearing a deal to sell its India operations, which it values at around $10 billion, to Reliance Industries (RELI.NS), its biggest rival in the country, rather than sell the business in parts, Bloomberg News reported on Monday.

Disney has been exploring options to sell or find a partner for its India assets, Reuters reported in July, and has held talks with billionaires Gautam Adani and Sun TV Network-owner (SUTV.NS) Kalanithi Maran as well as private equity firm Blackstone (BX.N), according to various media reports.

However, Disney may now sell a controlling stake in the business to Reliance, the Mukesh Ambani-controlled conglomerate whose streaming platform's success has weighed on the U.S. company's Indian business, Bloomberg reported.

Reliance, whose broadcast venture Viacom18 runs JioCinema, values Disney's India assets, which comprises the Disney+ Hotstar streaming service and Star India, at between $7 billion and $8 billion, the report said.

The enterprise value of the India business, Disney's biggest last year globally by users, was seen at around $15 billion to 16 billion when Disney took over Fox's business.

The deal could be announced as early as next month, although no final decision has been made and Disney could still decide to hold onto the assets, Bloomberg reported.

Disney and Reliance did not immediately respond to Reuters' requests for comment.

JioCinema has put increased pressure on Disney India and other streaming platforms, with Ambani marketing the platform by offering free access to the Indian Premier League cricket tournament, digital rights of which were earlier with Disney.

"If Reliance offers Disney content free of cost, the growth rate for the OTT industry will be lower because subscription video-on-demand revenue will not happen," said Karan Taurani, senior vice president and research analyst at Elara Securities.

The "sizeable" overlap in Reliance-owned TV18 Broadcast (TVEB.NS) and Disney in the urban genre might create regulatory resistance and some channels may need to be shut down for clearance, Taurani said.
 

Indy_UK

Well-Known Member
$10 billion may be worth while to cover the cost of buying the rest of Hulu out from Comcast because wasn't it the Indian subscribers that were paying the equivalent of 50 cent a month for a subscription? and costing billions in rights for the cricket to keep them subscribed?
 

Lilofan

Well-Known Member
$10 billion may be worth while to cover the cost of buying the rest of Hulu out from Comcast because wasn't it the Indian subscribers that were paying the equivalent of 50 cent a month for a subscription? and costing billions in rights for the cricket to keep them subscribed?
TWDC is over $40B in debt. Anything to pay it down.
 

Tha Realest

Well-Known Member
$10 billion may be worth while to cover the cost of buying the rest of Hulu out from Comcast because wasn't it the Indian subscribers that were paying the equivalent of 50 cent a month for a subscription? and costing billions in rights for the cricket to keep them subscribed?
Maybe. But selling an asset somewhere between $7/$10 billion that was valued at $16-$17bn a few years ago is suboptimal.
 

BrianLo

Well-Known Member
Maybe. But selling an asset somewhere between $7/$10 billion that was valued at $16-$17bn a few years ago is suboptimal.

It's the whole push and pull of the Fox acquisition. I think Iger's original price was the correct valuation.

But Disney did still offload quite a lot of elements and frankly I think some of those elements (of the 30 billion they've offloaded so far) were overpriced. We know Sky at least was overpriced as Comcast wrote it down.

So while the Indian assets are less than the over-inflated amount, we now *theoretically* are whittling down Disney's all in price for Fox to 30-odd billion from the 71.3 it was acquired for.

Is what Disney left with worth 30? Hulu's stake seems to be 10 (rounding for ease)

Out of 20 billion remaining? The Studios (20th, 2000, Searchlight), back catalogue, FX, Nat Geo and a smattering of ancillary stuff and IP rights.

It's ok... Like I said the real deal was Iger's original negotiation. The trouble was Bob was involved and the industry already let him get away with too many good deals. Unequivocally, the 50-odd billion was a great deal. The 70 billion was probably what the parts are all worth, but without any sort of package discount behind it.

In the rear view mirror I think the Disney-Fox deal will be 'ok', but it certainly wasn't the plan to have a yard sale to make it so.
 

Register on WDWMAGIC. This sidebar will go away, and you'll see fewer ads.

Back
Top Bottom