Tag: AOL Time Warner

  • CNN to broadcast in Korean too

    CNN to broadcast in Korean too

    CNN is to begin broadcasting eight of its news and feature programmes in Korean for the first time as part of the global news networks distribution agreement with CSTV.

    These programmes will be subtitled in Korean for cable audiences in South Korea starting today, a CNN release states.

    The programmes airing in Korean will initially include ‘Larry King Live’, ‘BizAsia’, ‘World Beat’, ‘CNNhotspots’, ‘CNNdotCOM’, ‘ebizasia’, ‘Science and Technology Week’, and ‘Business Unusual’. Yernho Kim, CEO and Chairman of CSTV says: “We are very excited to be able to offer localised versions of CNN’s world quality news and other programmes to Korean audiences. In future, we will continue to expand our localised services to deliver a wider range of CNN’s programmes to a greater audience.”

    CSTV Korea (Cable and Satellite TV Korea) signed agreements with Turner International Asia Pacific Inc. (a subsidiary of AOL Time Warner) for exclusive distribution of CNN International to cable system operators in Korea in November 2000. This was a landmark agreement as it meant CNN was the first international news channel to be officially distributed in South Korea.

  • Zee takes 33 % stake in Padmalaya Telefilms

    Zee takes 33 % stake in Padmalaya Telefilms

    While the talk around Zee Telefilms is whether AOL Time Warner will acquire a strategic stake in Subhash Chandra’s company, the media baron seems to be on an acquisition spree of his own.

    Hardly had the dust settled on Zee’s buyout of ETC Networks Ltd (which runs channel etc and etc Punjabi), it was announced yesterday that Zee is acquiring a 32.8 per cent strategic stake in Padmalaya Telefilms Ltd (PTL). This is being done through the acquisition of a 64.3 per cent stake in PTL’s holding company, Padmalaya Enterprises Pvt Ltd (PEPL).

    ZTL will pay Rs 590 million in an all cash deal for the 32.8 per cent stake in PTL and includes a preferential allotment to be made by PTL to PEPL, and a mandatory 20 per cent open offer the holding company will have to make following the change in the ownership of promoters’ holding. The preferential allotment will be at a price of Rs 142.20 per share and the open offer will be at the price of Rs 148.50 per share. ZTL has entered into an MoU with PTL for this acquisition.

    “With this deal Zee will get access to Padmalaya’s film library of 300 movies and 1,500 hours of TV software useful for sourthern markets and allows us to consolidate PTL financial’s with ZTL’s balance sheet,” Chandra has been quoted as saying.

    ZTL will hold 64.3 per cent in the holding company while PTL’s present promoters, Seshagiri Rao and his family, will hold 36 per cent. PTL has convened an extraordinary general meeting (EGM) of PTL on March 27 to seek shareholder approval for the preferential allotment.

    Subsequent to this preferential allotment, PEPL will make an open offer (to be funded by ZTL for Rs 320 million) to the shareholders of PTL at a price of Rs 148.5 per share to acquire an additional 20 per cent stake in PTL. Post-preferential allotment and open offer, PEPL’s holding in PTL will be 51 per cent. ZTL and the promoters of PTL would jointly control management of PTL. Both Zee and PTL have the right to appoint nominees on the board of PTL relative to their respective shareholding PTL and PEPL.

    Zee’s acquisition of PTL creates an entertainment powerhouse with strengths in animation software, film production and distribution and television content. The synergising of the operations of the animation units of Zee and PTL will make it the largest animation filmmaker in Asia, the company claims.

  • Sony, Discovery ink distribution deal, warn of hike in subscription rates

    Sony, Discovery ink distribution deal, warn of hike in subscription rates

    It has been a marriage a long time in the making. Sony Entertainment Television (SET) India and Discovery Networks International (DNI) announced yesterday a distribution alliance that brings the two DNI channels, Discovery and Animal Planet, onto the Sony platform.

    While talk of such a deal has been doing the rounds for well over a year now, company officials admitted that some urgency came into the whole equation only in the last three months. It may be recalled that it was just under three months ago (13 December to be exact) that Subhash Chandra’s Zee Telefilms and AOL Time Warner’s Indian unit announced a channel distribution joint venture that brought the three Turner International channels Cartoon Network, CNN and HBO onto Zee’s 14-channel bouquet.

    The two companies will be setting up a joint venture to handle distribution. Queried as to what sort of equity break-up the new company would have, neither Sony Entertainment Television CEO Kunal Dasgupta nor Discovery Networks India MD Deepak Shourie would offer any clues. Their explanation: It will be worked out after regulatory approvals (from the Foreign Investment Promotion Board?) had been secured. However, if the JV is anything like the Zee-Turner one (where Zee has a 74 per cent stake), SET is likely to hold a larger chunk of equity.

    The deal is to take effect from 1 April and the new venture will be headed by Shantonu Aditya, senior V-P, franchise channels and distribution, SET India, who will be the company president. From the Discovery side there is Anuj Gandhi, director, affiliate sales, India & South Asia, as the JV’s vice-president.

    The alliance is being formed at a time when commercial broadcasters in India are increasingly looking at subscription revenues to shore up bottomlines in a climate where the fight for a share of the stagnant ad pie is becoming more and more difficult.

    With the addition of Discovery and Animal Planet, the SET bouquet offers a six-channel compact quality package that includes SET, SET MAX, action channel AXN, and business news channel CNBC. One thing that Dasgupta made clear without providing any numbers was that the bouquet would cost more. Queried as to how they expected cable operators to accept increases when resistance was becoming increasingly strident, Shourie said the quality of the package added to an improvement in the services that two companies working together would bring in would make the difference.

    MAJOR INCREASE IN CONNECTIVITY IS THE GOAL: The addition of the Discovery package is even more significant now that Sony has acquired the Indian broadcast rights to ICC designated tournaments for the next six years. The newly acquired cricket properties will without doubt be the cornerstone of Sony’s drive to increase connectivity across the country as well as push through whatever new subscription rates that will decided. The two channels just add some more muscle to that effort and it is an alliance that is bound to prove mutually beneficial.

    “This joint venture enables both partners to offer consumers a comprehensive and diverse bouquet of programming choices, enhancing both partners’ distribution strength,” Michael Grindon, president of Columbia TriStar International Television, SET India’s parent company, said in an official release.

    According to the same release, Dawn McCall, the president of Discovery Networks International, said: “Sony and Discovery bring unique, complementary strengths and knowledge to this new joint venture that will offer consumers endless entertainment choices.”

    Both the Discovery Channel and Sony Entertainment Television began broadcasting in India in 1995. According to the channels’ estimates, the former now reaches over 21 million subscriber households, the latter more than 29 million.

  • Cable TV’s top honchos to attend Consumer Electronics Show in Vegas

    Cable TV’s top honchos to attend Consumer Electronics Show in Vegas

    CEOs of some of the top cable operating companies in North America, all members of the CableLabs board of directors’ executive committee, are among more than 30 leaders from the cable industry who will attend the upcoming 2002 International Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas, Nevada.

    CEOs of some of the top cable operating companies in North America, all members of the CableLabs board of directors’ executive committee, are among more than 30 leaders from the cable industry who will attend the upcoming 2002 International Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas, Nevada.

    Joe Collins, Chairman and CEO of AOL Time Warner Interactive Video, will lead a CableLabs contingent that includes Bill Schleyer, CEO of AT&T Broadband, Glenn Britt, chairman and CEO of Time Warner Cable, Jim Robbins, president and CEO of Cox Communications, Brian Roberts, president of Comcast Communications, Carl Vogel, president and CEO of Charter Communications, among others at the 2002 International CES – Your Source for Workstyle and Lifestyle Technology from 8-11 January, an official release states.

    CableLabs is an R&D consortium of cable television system operators representing the continents of North America and South America. CableLabs plans and funds research and development projects and also transfers relevant technologies to member companies and to the industry.

  • JV unlikely to buttress Zee scrip: Oswal Securities

    JV unlikely to buttress Zee scrip: Oswal Securities

    Yesterday Zee Telefilms and Turner International India (a 100 per cent subsidiary of AOL Time Warner) announced a joint venture with Zee holding a 74 per cent equity stake and Turner holding the balance 26 per cent.

     

    What happened on the bourses following this piece of positive news makes for interesting reading though. The Zee scrip has been in a downward spiral since peaking on 11 December at Rs 151.45. The scrip closed down at Rs 134.35 yesterday and continued its fall to close at Rs 123.75 today.

     

    According to Motilal Oswal Securities though, this movement is not surprising. A report it has prepared states that the core issues dogging Zee remain – that of management quality, transparency, disclosure standards and unauthorised advances to group companies. Zee is also badly in need of funds to repay its debt of Rs 7 billion plus. It needs money for its hybrid fibre coax (HFC) network and acquisition of the last mile too. The number of days debts are outstanding on a consolidated basis has touched 180 days, clearly indicating stress on the business. None of these crucial issues would be addressed by this marketing JV, due to which Oswal Securities remains distinctly cool to these developments.

     

    The report it has prepared further states that prospects of any resurgence driven by content continues to be bleak. Viewership is down significantly, making Zee TV the No 3 Hindi entertainment channel. Zee TV’s channel share has slipped to an abysmal 4.4 per cent compared to Sony TV’s 8.2 per cent and Star Plus’ 19.4 per cent in the prime time slot. Now, the gap with Sony is also increasing continuously and there seems to be no major reversal in sight.

     

    The management owes Zee Telefilms around RS 2.2 billion and there are no evident signs of repayment of the dues coming through. This after having missed the promised deadline several times. Even if the new JV brings along benefits in terms of better acceptance of the bouquet by MSOs, earnings will not get impacted materially over the next 4 quarters.

     

    Oswal Securities expects an EPS of Rs 4.96 in FY02 (a growth of 12 per cent) and Rs 5.95 in FY03 (a growth of 20 per cent).

     

    The stock price has run up from Rs 70 exclusively on the hopes of induction of a strategic partner (AOL Time Warner) in Zee Telefilms at a price of Rs175 plus. This JV with Turner International does not match up to anything close to a strategic stake by AOL Time Warner in Zee Telefilms.

     

    This is a major disappointment for the market after expectations were run up so high. At the current price, the stock quotes at a P/E of 27x FY02 and 22.4x FY03 earnings. With valuations clearly stretched, the stock price will fall from these levels, the report concludes.

  • Star bouquet to cost Rs 40.50 from next month

    Star bouquet to cost Rs 40.50 from next month

    Star India, Indian cable & satellite’s “price driver,” today announced a major hike in its monthly subscription rates, effective January, from the current Rs 30 to Rs 40.50. The buzz has been in the air for a while now that Star is going in for a further hike in its subscription rates and come 1 January (?) that will be the case.

    This move on Star’s part is likely to be followed by a subscription hike announcement by ESPN Star Sports – again to come into force in January – as well as by the Zee Network. Industry sources say talk of a subscription hike was one of the reasons for the recent spurt seen in the Zee scrip (other than speculation surrounding a possible offload of stake to AOL Time Warner).

    If anything, the hike by ESPN Star Sports (in percentage terms) will be even more significant with the expected pricing for the two premium sports channels being between Rs 20-24 from the current Rs 16 rate.

    As per current indications, Sony Entertainment Television is not likely to change its pricing structure anytime soon, at least not till it has set its house in order as far as its management structure is concerned.

    Defending itself, Star says while India’s cable industry has grown to a nationwide figure of 38 million homes (NRS), the broadcaster is only paid for 6 million homes. Peter Mukerjea, CEO, Star Network, says: “It is sad that just 6 million subscribers in the country share the cost of 38 million cable homes. If cable operators and MSO’s declared their true connectivity, we would be in a position to reduce our monthly charge in the long run.”

    Sameer Nair, executive VP – head of content & communication says: “We have increased our investment in programming so as to deliver a better viewer experience. We are evolving and innovating with every new programme that we bring, to our viewers. With escalating costs and high production values, that go into this process, it’s only fair that the cable operators declare their true connectivity or accept this nominal price increase.”

    Star’s announcement looks likely to set in motion a major dogfight with cable operators and MSOs. Some Mumbai-based operators, when contacted, said they were still to decide how to respond to the proposed hike.

    Ashok Mansukhani, executive V-P, corporate services, HTMT, part of the Hinduja Group that runs the InCable MSO, giving the cable industry’s point of view, asserted the hikes were unsustainable in the current scenario.

    According to Mansukhani, the cable industry would only accept further subscription hikes if the government acceded to two of longstanding demands:

    * The government shift the burden of entertainment tax to the broadcasters.

    * Compulsory institution of conditional access systems so that subscribers have the option of seeing (and thereby paying for) only the channels they wanted to see.

    How the issue will pan out should become clearer in the coming days.

  • Zee stock soars on rumours

    Zee stock soars on rumours

    It is happening again. Beleagured media major Zee Telefilms (ZTL) which has been under pressure for the last few months, is suddening gaining support – at least, on the bourse.

    This time the rumour doing the rounds is that Zee’s promoters have privately placed shares at Rs 185 with a foreign media major as against Thursday’s closing price of Rs 118.40 on the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE). The Zee stock had almost hit the upper circuit filter yesterday at Rs 125.40, before closing at Rs 118.

    The company that is being quoted as the buyer is none other than AOL Time Warner, whom Zee is reportedly trying to rope in as a strategic partner. Talk within the company surfaced around a month and a half ago that AOL Time Warner was warming up to getting under the sheets with the network. At that time the ZTL share was trading at around Rs 71. Since then, the ZTL share has been steadily on the rise. 

    A ZTL press release earlier this week, however, denied the rumour of any such placement but reiterated that the promoters’ decision announced in May 2001 to rope in a global media player as a strategic ally, is still on. ZTL has appointed investment bankers UBS Warburg as advisor in its search for a partner. 

    Media analysts, when contacted, say they did not believe any private placement had taken place as yet (at the time of writing), but suspect that someone is playing in the scrip. 

    The stock had earlier been on the decline, going down from Rs 270 at the beginning of the year, to Rs 86 on the day of its AGM in late September. The post AGM period saw the scrip hammered down to Rs 71 (9 October). The average volume, which was 10 million, came down to 4 million. But the scrip has turned around since. Today, the scrip had climbed by 4 per cent and was trading at Rs 121.

  • AOL Time Warner gets first foreign cable carriage rights in China

    AOL Time Warner gets first foreign cable carriage rights in China

    AOL Time Warner’s China Entertainment TV (CETV) has become the first foreign TV channel to be granted cable carriage rights in mainland China. According to the agreement with the People’s Republic of China, CETV, a 24-hour Mandarin language information and entertainment channel, will be distributed to cable TV subscribers in the southern region of China from January 2002. As part of the agreement, CCTV-9, the English-language news and information channel of the China Central Television network (China’s national broadcaster) will be carried on select Time Warner Cable systems – the first time a CCTV network will be carried on a 24-hour basis on any US cable system.

    Gerald M Levin, CEO of AOL Time Warner, said the reciprocal nature of the agreement means that American audiences will gain a greater understanding of Chinese culture as well as an appreciation of the immense intellect, artistry and creativity of the Chinese people.

    Following AOL Time Warner’s acquisition of the channel in June 2000, CETV was re-launched in February 2001. Reaching 80 million households in Asia via AsiaSat 3S, the channel airs a combination of original Chinese CO-productions as well as specially selected programming derived from AOL Time Warner resources, a company release says.

  • Casbaa Satellite Group launching 18 June; conference in Singapore

    Casbaa Satellite Group launching 18 June; conference in Singapore

    The Cable & Satellite Broadcasting Association of Asia (Casbaa) will formally launch the Casbaa Satellite Group on 18 June in Singapore with a one-day conference featuring a keynote address from Douglas Kahn, president and CEO of PanAmSat, as well as the participation of senior executives from SES Astra, Boeing Space, Americom Asia-Pacifc, Shinawatra Satellite, AsiaSat, STAR Group, New Skies Satellite, AOL Time Warner and Binariang Satellite.

    Among the papers that will be presented at the conference include: “Ten Years Ahead – Next Generation Satcoms” (speaker Randy Brinkley, president, Boeing Satellite Systems); “Broadband via Satellite – Prospects & Perils For Asia” (speaker Christopher Slaughter director Asia Pacific Communications Yankee Group);

    “Financing In The New Era: Strategic Alliances, Partnerships, Mergers & Acquisitions.”

    With the Iridium crash and potential failure for a large, multi-billion dollar market for handheld mobile satellite telephony, investors are becoming increasingly cautious.
    * What is the current state of satellite financing in Asia?
    * What is the financial outlook for broadband systems?
    * What are the various means to obtain financing?

    “Broadband Content Over Satellite.”

    A key element in the future of the communications industry lies in rich media with ‘infotainment’ applications and services coming online all the time. Many now believe that the network itself is far less important than the information or content carried over the network.
    * How will telecom operators, communications service providers, ISPs, content providers, broadcasters and media define themselves within this new economy?
    * To what extent will the new communications economy be based around content?
    * What are the market implications? Satellite News Gathering (SNG)? * Where are the threats and opportunities?

    “Fast Forward To The Future: Strategic Intelligence Now!”

    Content is king but does not yet reign supreme. Content markets are developing rapidly, with traditional providers going online, new entrants and specialist distributors emerging and media players merging into the telecoms industry.
    * Will the convergence between telecoms, ISPs , broadcast and media continue?
    * If content is to be the new currency, how will it be valued and leveraged as a strategic weapon?
    * Who are the players in the content value-chain?
    * What is the role of content access in forging industry partnerships?