GE, Vivendi talks over NBC stretch on
Comcast seeks control of NBC Universal; Vivendi in no hurry to sell its stake
In this Dec. 3, 2007 file photo, a view of the headquarters of Vivendi SA in Paris, is shown. Media and entertainment conglomerate Vivendi SA is nearing a decision Friday, Nov. 20, 2009, on whether to sell its stake in NBC Universal, which would clear the way for the creation of one of the most powerful media companies in the world.
(AP Photo/Jacques Brinon, file)Published: Saturday, November 21, 2009 at 4:03 a.m.
Last Modified: Saturday, November 21, 2009 at 4:03 a.m.
PHILADELPHIA -- A deal for Comcast Corp. to buy a controlling stake in NBC Universal and create one of the most powerful media companies in the world is taking longer than expected as the current owners tussle over price.
Comcast, the largest cable TV operator in the United States, wants NBC Universal largely for its lucrative cable channels, but it isn't likely to raise its offer to General Electric Co., which first needs Vivendi SA to sell its minority stake.
If GE had to pay Vivendi more for that stake, it would have to absorb the additional cost because Comcast's agreement with GE is "set" and separate from the Vivendi talks, according to a person familiar with the situation, speaking on condition of anonymity because the person is not authorized to disclose private negotiations.
Plans currently call for GE, which owns 80 percent of NBC Universal, to buy Vivendi's 20 percent stake and sell 51 percent ownership in the entire unit to Comcast for about $5 billion to $7 billion in cash. Comcast would contribute cable networks such as E! and Style to a new NBC Universal joint venture with GE, raising Comcast's bid to about $15 billion.
The new NBC Universal would carry $8 billion to $10 billion of debt and operate under Comcast as its majority owner.
But to make it work, Vivendi first has to sell its stake, and a top Vivendi executive told investors at a conference in Barcelona on Thursday that it doesn't have to sell NBC Universal this year.
"We're not forced to do anything," Vivendi Chief Financial Officer Philippe Capron said. "We can also just say no."
Vivendi, a media and entertainment conglomerate based in Paris, could be posturing because all sides have a reason to do the deal.
GE, a technology, media and financial services company with headquarters in Fairfield, Conn., wants to unload NBC Universal, a unit that doesn't fit in well with its other businesses. The cash would help prop up its financing unit, GE Capital, which posted big losses from real estate and other industries during the financial meltdown.
Vivendi also could use additional funds especially after last week, when it took a controlling stake in Brazilian telecommunications operator GVT SA for $4.2 billion. The French company has called its NBC Universal holding "non-core."
Comcast, meanwhile, wants to beef up its content assets. NBC Universal spans the NBC and Telemundo broadcast networks; cable channels such as Bravo and CNBC; the Universal Pictures movie studio and Universal theme parks. The acquisition would turn the Philadelphia-based cable TV operator into one of the world's largest entertainment companies.
An agreement between Comcast and GE was supposed to be announced as early as this week. But now the parties are bracing for talks to stretch into December.
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