Foros de Supervaca.com

Versión completa: Ofrecen por Disney 66 mil millones de dólares
Actualmente estas viendo una versión simplificada de nuestro contenido. Ver la versión completa con el formato correcto.
elnorte.com

Las deudas de Disney suman 11 mil 900 millones de dólares

Por AFP y EFE

Nueva York, Estados Unidos (11 febrero 2004).- La compañía Comcast, operadora de cable en Estados Unidos, anunció hoy que tiene la intención de comprar Walt Disney en una transacción que valúa al grupo de medios en 66 mil millones de dólares, de acuerdo con un comunicado.

En el documento, el presidente de Comcast, Brian Roberts, indicó que su firma está dispuesta a asumir las deudas de Disney, que suman 11 mil 900 millones de dólares, que sumados a los 54 mil millones de dólares por la compra de la empresa lleva el valor total de la transacción a 66 mil millones de dólares.

"Es una oportunidad única para los accionistas de Comcast y de Disney de crear un nuevo líder del mundo del entretenimiento", declaró el director general de Comcast.

El directivo envió una carta con la propuesta a Michael Eisner, director general de Walt Disney.

Si la operación se consuma convertirá a Comcast en una de las mayores compañías de medios de comunicación en el mundo entero, que incluiría los 21 millones de suscriptores de cable de Comcast con la red ABC de televisión, la red ESPN de televisión deportiva, y los estudios cinematográficos y parques de Disney.

Comcast señala que tal combinación crearía la mayor compañía mundial y de entretenimientos en el mundo con una presencia en los 25 mayores mercados de Estados Unidos, y que "impulsará hacia adelante la expansión de la banda ancha".

"(Esta combinación) tendrá una plataforma de distribución sin paralelo y un extraordinario portafolio de contenidos".




Salu2
Seguramente Ted Turner no va a poder dormir... :lol:
Pues el tío Eisner dijo que se le hizo poco...


Disney Rejects Comcast Offer, Backs Eisner
Monday February 16, 11:06 pm ET
By Peter Henderson


LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Walt Disney Co.'s board said on Monday it had unanimously rejected cable operator Comcast Corp's unsolicited takeover bid as too low and endorsed Chief Executive and Chairman Michael Eisner and his strategy for the company.
ADVERTISEMENT


The Disney board said it would carefully consider any "legitimate proposal" that created shareholder value. Comcast, which vowed it would be a disciplined bidder, almost immediately shot back that its proposal was "compelling" and "sound."

The Disney board gave its backing to Eisner and said it expected the company's current structure and strategy would maximize shareholder value.

Eisner has said Disney is doing well as a stand-alone content provider. Meanwhile rivals like Time Warner Inc and News Corp have struck deals to merge content and distribution, the same strategy Comcast proposes.

"The board has confidence in the business, financial and creative direction of Disney under the leadership of Michael Eisner and his management team," Disney's board said in a statement.

"The interests of Disney shareholders, which represent the fundamental priority of the board, would not be served by accepting any acquisition proposal that does not reflect fully Disney's intrinsic value and earnings prospects," the board also said.

Comcast, the nation's largest cable TV company, last week made a surprise bid to acquire Disney, an entertainment icon which owns Hollywood's top studio, the ABC television network and the cable sports network ESPN.

Comcast Chief Executive Officer Brian Roberts said last week that Comcast made its offer directly to Disney's board after Eisner had rejected the offer.

The value of the all-stock bid sank to less than $48 billion in Comcast stock on Friday from an initial value of $54 billion, but Comcast on Monday said its offer was fair.

"Our proposal to acquire The Walt Disney Company reflects a full and generous valuation based upon Disney's prospects and performance over a long period of time, representing a significant premium over Disney's unaffected share price during any relevant measurement period over the last three years," Comcast said.

"We maintain the belief that our merger proposal represents a sound and compelling proposition for both sets of shareholders," the cable operator said.

Sanford Bernstein analyst Craig Moffett said that Comcast did not need to hurry and could engage in a patient game of brinkmanship.

"Time is on Comcast's side. There's no urgency to either withdraw or up their offer," he said.

"Comcast can sit on the sidelines here for months until their share price has recovered. And if no other bidder materializes, Disney's stock could well sink back a bit and shareholders could be more receptive to an alternative offer down the road," he said.

Other analysts have said it is unlikely that a rival bidder will emerge, given the size of the transaction and potential regulatory hurdles.

Investors bid up Disney shares immediately after the Comcast bid, expecting the offer to be raised.

Disney shares ended the week at $26.92 compared with their implied value in Comcast stock of just $23.32, a deficit of $3.60 per share that the Disney board noted in its statement.

The voice of support for Eisner comes after independent corporate governance analyst Institutional Shareholder Services, a strong influence on Wall Street, recommended last week that shareholders vote against reelecting Eisner to the board at the annual meeting scheduled for March 3.

The Disney family, led by former director Roy Disney, also is spearheading a campaign for Eisner's ouster.

Comcast shares declined for three straight days last week after the all-stock bid was announced, valuing Disney at the end of the week at about $48 billion

Comcast's offer valued Disney at about $23 a share, which was below Disney's closing stock price of $26.92 on Friday. The U.S. financial markets were closed on Monday for the President's Day holiday. (Additional reporting by Jessica Hall and Kenneth Li in New York and Kevin Krolicki in Los Angeles)
Compra Disney a Los Muppets

Grupo Reforma/DPA

Los Ángeles, Estados Unidos (18 febrero 2004).- Días después de rechazar la oferta de compra del gigante de cable Comcast, Walt Disney se ha expandido adquiriendo los derechos sobre los personajes de los Muppets por una suma no revelada, informó hoy la empresa.

El acuerdo, que significa que el ratón Mickey y otros de los personajes tradicionales de Disney podrían aparecer en nuevos shows televisivos y películas junto con personajes como la cerdita Piggy.

Disney ya trató de comprar los personajes en 1990, pero el acuerdo fracasó y los Muppets fueron vendidos a la compañía alemana EM.TV, que los vendió el año pasado a la familia de su creador, Jim Henson.



Salu2
Bueno, lo del los Muppets discútanlo en el tema correspondiente que se puso hoy:

http://www.supervaca.com/foro/viewtopic.php?t=2114
La semana que entra son las votaciones para ver si Eisner sigue formando parte del "Board of Management" de Disney. Por lo menos se sabe, que hay un grupo que representa el 30% de los votos que no piensan apoyarlo.