Malone seals US$78bn Time Warner Cable deal

Cable magnate John Malone-backed US cable operator Charter Communications has struck a deal to merge with Time Warner Cable and acquire US number six cable operator Bright House Networks in a deal that values Time Warner Cable at US$78.7 billion.

Charter is to pay US$195.71 a share, representing a premium of about 14% of Time Warner Cable’s closing price on Friday in a cash and shares deal. The operator will pay US$100 per share in cash and shares in a new public parent company, New Charter equivalent to 0.5409 shares for each Time Warner Cable share.

Charter will also provide an election option for each Time Warner Cable stockholder who, with the exception of shareholders in Liberty Broadband, Malone’s investment vehicle, and Liberty Interactive, will receive stock giving them US$115 in cash and New Charter shares equivalent to 0.4562 of old Charter shares for each Time Warner Cable share they own.

According to Bloomberg, Charter was forced to raise its bid for the US number two cable operator after facing competition from telecom investor Patrick Drahi’s Altice, which last week struck a US$9.1 billion deal to acquire the seventh largest US operator, Suddenlink.

Bloomberg reported that Drahi met Time Warner Cable CEO Rob Marcus while in the US last week.

New Charter will be led by the company’s existing CEO Tom Rutledge, who will be offered a new five-year contract and will also be offered the role of chairman. Current chairman Eric Zinterhofer will continue to serve on New Charter’s board.

Charter meanwhile will fold Bright House Networks, which it is buying for US$10.4 billion, into the combined entity. Time Warner Cable itself had a right to match or block that deal under a previous agreement, and Charter’s deal with the latter clears the way for the acquisition of Bright House as well.

The three-way combination will create a new number two operator serving 23.9 million customers in the US.

Charter previously attempted to acquire Time Warner Cable early last year but was beaten to a deal by Comcast. It is now make a second bid for the operator following the collapse of the Comcast-Time Warner Cable agreement.

Malone’s Liberty Broadband holds a 26% stake in Charter.

“The teams at Charter, Time Warner Cable and Bright House Networks are filled with the innovators of our industry. Representatives of each of these companies have invented some of the most revolutionary communications products ever created; innovations like video on demand, VOIP phone service, remote storage DVR, cable TV through an app, downloadable security and the first backward-compatible, cloud-based user interface. That spirit of innovation will live on, and it will create real benefits and great long-term value for the customers, shareholders and employees of all three companies,” said Rutledge.

He added: “Put simply, the scale of New Charter, along with the combined talents we can bring to bear, position us to deliver a communications future that will unleash the full power of the two-way, interactive cable network.”

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