The Business Times

Zee to take legal action after Sony terminates US$10 billion India merger

Published Mon, Jan 22, 2024 · 12:20 PM

Indian broadcaster Zee Entertainment said on Monday (Jan 22) it will take legal action against Sony Group after the Japanese media company terminated a US$10 billion merger of their India operations.

Sony ended the merger, which was announced two years ago, as they could not agree on some deal conditions, and has also sought US$90 million in termination fees from Zee.

The deal, announced more than two years ago, was perceived as crucial for the survival of the companies in a highly competitive market, given the impending merger between Disney’s Indian businesses and the media assets of billionaire Mukesh Ambani’s Reliance Industries.

Sony said it had been “engaged in discussions in good faith to extend the end date but the discussion period had expired without an agreement upon an extension of the end date”.

It cited unmet conditions of the merger agreement as the reason for the termination.

Although Sony did not specify on Monday what conditions were unfulfilled, a stalemate over who will lead the combined company had put the merger in danger.

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Zee proposed CEO Punit Goenka, but Sony disagreed in light of a market regulator probe into Goenka.

Sony said it did not expect any material impact on its fiscal 2024 results from the termination as it did factor in the deal to its outlook.

Zee did not immediately respond to Reuters’ request for comment.

On Friday, Zee had said it was committed to the merger and was working to close the deal through “good faith negotiations”. It was seeking to discuss an extension to a Jan 20 deadline to close the deal.

“A deal collapse will have a negative impact on both parties as they were looking at scaling up in the Indian market which is going through a digital disruption and a potential threat of increased competition intensity if the Reliance-Disney deal goes through,” said Karan Taurani, an analyst at Elara Capital.

The cash-strapped local broadcaster is also contending with declining profits, advertising revenue and cash reserves in a market where global streaming giants such as Netflix and Amazon.com are also jostling for share.

Zee’s four-year pact with Disney’s Star for TV broadcasting rights of certain cricket events will also be at risk if the deal collapses, as Zee would have to pay US$1.32 billion to US$1.44 billion over the tenure of the agreement, analysts have said.

The broadcaster missed an early-January deadline to pay US$200 million, Bloomberg News reported on Jan 9. REUTERS

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