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Media conglomerates - Breaking up is not so very hard to do

2013-06-26 08:38:21

Media empires are becoming more focused, and shareholders like it

Jun 22nd 2013

RUPERT MURDOCH, the billionaire founder of News Corporation, recently filed for

divorce from his third wife, Wendi Deng. This is not the only break-up he is

going through. On June 28th his company will split in two shares in both parts

began trading this week with most of its lucrative film and television assets

being hived off into a new group, called 21st Century Fox. The rump News Corp

will be left with newspapers and other lower-growth businesses (see article).

News Corp is not the only sprawling media conglomerate that is streamlining its

businesses. Time Warner said in March that it would spin off its magazine unit,

Time Inc, by the end of the year. Vivendi, a flailing French group with more

disparate properties than the French have public holidays, is expected to shed

its telecoms assets in order to specialise in entertainment. Others to have

divested assets include Pearson, a part-owner of The Economist, which has sold

or merged various properties to concentrate on education (see table).

In a 2009 book, Curse of the Mogul , Jonathan Knee, Bruce Greenwald and Ava

Seave analysed media conglomerates chronically poor performance, blaming it

mainly on their bosses appetite for trophy assets that buy them power and

visibility. This propensity for big, dumb deals has hurt investors: AOL s

disastrous merger with Time Warner and News Corp s purchase of Dow Jones in

2007 for around $5.6 billion more than double its market value at the time are

two examples. In the ten years to 2005, four large media conglomerates, News

Corp, Viacom, Disney and Time Warner, together produced returns one-third of

the average for firms in the S&P 500 index. Between 2000 and 2009 they had to

write down $200 billion in assets.

More recently, media firms have sparkled. In the past month the shares of some

firms have reached all-time highs, and over the past five years News Corp,

Viacom, Disney and Time Warner have each delivered more than twice the S&P 500

s average return of 6.1%. Part of this is due to investors calming down about

the immediate threat of Netflix and other disrupters to pay-TV. But it is also

in part due to a change in media moguls behaviour.

In most businesses, conglomerates went out of favour after the 1980s. But media

bosses, always fashionably late to parties, have taken several decades to

follow. Their recent disposals of non-core assets have helped win over

distrustful shareholders. Investors like to own a business they can

understand, says Philippe Dauman, the boss of Viacom. (His firm launched the

trend of deconglomeration when it separated its broadcast-TV and other

businesses into CBS Corporation in 2006.) Most shareholders now see that

television networks, newspapers, film studios, music labels and other sundry

assets add little value by sharing a parent. Their proximity can even hinder

performance by distracting management.

Each media firm has had its own reasons for offloading assets, but there are

some shared themes. Shareholders have become more assertive and less likely to

believe the moguls flannel about synergies . In particular they are more

sceptical that makers of content and hardware belong together. This week Dan

Loeb, a hedge-fund manager, raised his stake in Sony, a Japanese electronics

and entertainment firm, and is pressing its managers to spin off the film

studio and music business. Making Skyfall is a different business from

manufacturing a television.

An even bigger driver of the spin-offs is the inky mood of the publishing

business. The divergence today between low-growth, low-multiple businesses and

higher-growth businesses in media has never been greater, says Jonathan

Nelson, the boss of Providence Equity Partners, a private-equity firm. Bosses

either want to shed print assets to focus on higher-growth television, as with

Time Warner spinning out Time Inc, or to unload assets that distract them from

giving their main brand the attention and resources it needs, as the New York

Times Company is doing by selling the Boston Globe.

When the market crashed in 2008, media companies were hit particularly hard and

needed more disciplined leadership. Although Mr Murdoch, aged 82, shows little

sign of stepping out of the limelight, there is a new generation of media

bosses who are less flamboyant than their predecessors and more interested in

making money than in wielding power and influence. Most people outside the

industry will barely have heard of Jeff Bewkes, the boss of Time Warner, or Les

Moonves of CBS, for example, but they are popular among shareholders.

Long gone are the days when money was scattered around like confetti at a

Hollywood wedding. When Terra Firma, a private-equity firm, bought EMI, a music

label, in 2007 its executives were said to be horrified on learning that the

fruit and flowers referred to in expense accounts were slang for drugs and

prostitutes. Today it is all about another f-word: frugality. This is

particularly true in publishing. Robert Thomson, the boss of the new News Corp,

promises relentless cost-cutting.

In many cases, what the slimmed-down media conglomerates are hanging on to is

their cable-TV networks. After Time Warner spins out Time Inc, 80% of its

operating profits will come from its networks (which include HBO), up from 32%

in 2008. More than 90% of Viacom s operating profits came from its networks in

2012. Discovery Communications, one of the best-performing media stocks over

the past few years, specialises in building and expanding television networks,

such as the Discovery Channel and Animal Planet.

For now investors like having exposure to this cash-rich, growing industry. The

rise of Netflix, Hulu and other online-streaming services has so far caused

little disruption to the pay-TV business model. But should this change, these

firms lack of diversification could become a liability.

A few media firms are still bucking the trend and adding a bit of sprawl. In

2011 Comcast, an American cable operator, bought NBCUniversal, a film-and-TV

content company with a broadcast arm, making it the largest media group in the

world after Disney: its market capitalisation is now over $100 billion. As for

Disney itself, besides buying Lucasfilm, the production company behind Star

Wars , last year, it also bought control of UTV, a Bollywood-to-computer-games

business in Mumbai.

In businesses that benefit from scale, such as cable and newspapers, there will

be more consolidation. Time Warner Cable and Charter Communications, two

American cable operators, are rumoured to be discussing a merger. Having

recently bought Virgin Media, a British cable firm, Liberty Global of America

which already owns Germany s second-largest cable operator is now competing

with Vodafone to buy Kabel Deutschland, Germany s largest. On June 13th

Gannett, a big American newspaper and local-TV chain, said it would merge with

Belo, a smaller counterpart, to expand its market share in both businesses

(while also, overall, making it less reliant on newspapers).

The media giants soaring share prices will make it easy for them to swallow

smaller firms. I think things are going to tend much more toward scale, says

James Murdoch, one of Rupert Murdoch s sons. Content groups are going to get

much larger. As long as they get bigger at what they do best, shareholders

will be happy.