A
man stands next to a banner of Sony Entertainment, outside a film set
in Mumbai, India, September 24, 2021. REUTERS/Francis Mascarenhas
Bengaluru: Japanese conglomerate Sony’s India unit has finalised a deal with local rival Zee Entertainment to merge their television channels, film assets and streaming platforms, the companies said on Wednesday.
The combined entity, nearly 51% owned by Sony Pictures Networks India
(SPNI), will own popular channels such as Sony MAX and Zee TV, along
with streaming platforms ZEE5 and SonyLIV, as part of the deal.
India,
still heavy on direct-to-home TV entertainment, has in the past few
years seen a surge of competition from streaming platforms including
Netflix Inc, Amazon.com Inc’s Prime Video and Walt Disney Co’s Hotstar.
The
companies also approved the appointment Zee’s top boss, Punit Goenka,
as the CEO and managing director of the merged entity, after a 90-day
due diligence period for the merger closed on December 21.
Zee’s
shares had rocketed 35% to notch a market capitalisation of nearly $4.5
billion when the merger was first announced in September.
“SPNI
will have a cash balance of $1.5 billion at deal close, including
through an infusion by current shareholders of SPNI and the promoters of
Zee,” the companies said.
The
deal will also likely ease the pressure that Zee was facing from top
shareholders who called for a management reshuffle in September,
including for the removal of CEO Punit Goenka from the board, amid
corporate governance concerns.
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