The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission undertook an
undisclosed investigation into James Packer and Lachlan Murdoch's
acquisition of 18 per cent of Ten Network because of concerns over
sports programming.
The secret work was done and evidence was taken in response
to the decisions made by the Packer/Murdoch-led Ten board to scrap the
Ten digital channel, One, which had been entirely devoted to sport.
At the time the Packer-controlled Consolidated Media Holdings
had a 50 per cent interest in subscription producer of sport Premier
Media Group. The other 50 per cent was owned by News Corporation -
which is controlled by Murdoch's father, Rupert.
The transformation of One from a sport channel into a
broader entertainment channel was explained by the new management of Ten
as purely financial. The digital upstart was losing money and rating
poorly.
There were a couple of other reasons the ACCC turned the active
investigation into a ''watching brief''. The first was that it was aware
that Packer was seeking to offload his interest in Premier Media and
Foxtel. The second was that there were a couple of other large
shareholders in Ten, Bruce Gordon's WIN and active funds manager
Perpetual.
Soon after Australia's richest person, Gina Rinehart, took a
10 per cent stake and joined the board. Thus the ACCC ultimately
concluded that together Lachlan Murdoch and Packer were not in a
position to control Ten.
But there is little doubt that axing Ten's fledgling sports
channel played well for Packer commercially. Financial statements from
his Consolidated Media demonstrate that Premier Media's performance was
stagnating while its results from Foxtel were much more positive.
The establishment of Ten's One channel created a new player
in the sports programming market. While it was not sufficiently large or
well-funded enough to bid for first-tier sporting events, its presence
in the room bidding for second-ranking products was pushing up their
price.
This was a problem for Premier Media Group and its various
Fox Sports operations. When the One sport channel was abandoned the
product it had acquired was on-sold to Premier Media for a knock down
price and Ten took a one-off financial hit as a result. From Packer's
perspective selling Consolidated Media - which owned Premier Media -
became a much more lucrative proposition when channel One was
disbanded.
He ultimately sold Consolidated Media in a $2 billion deal to
News Corporation. It was a good deal for Packer - leaving him flush
with funds to pursue his gaming interests through Crown. After he
bought into Ten back in 2010 he lasted only a few months on the Ten
board. While he has since supported the company by subscribing for its
two capital raisings, his influence has been publicly absent.
But as history has now clearly demonstrated Lachlan Murdoch
took undisputed control of Ten. Soon after buying he took over
management until his hand-picked chief executive James Warburton could
take over in early 2012. Murdoch sacked him a year later.
Over the past couple of weeks he has installed a News Ltd
executive, Hamish McLennan to replace Warburton. To be fair the
rationale for Packer and Murdoch taking a stake in Ten was a two-pronged
strategy. It wasn't all about sport.
The two media heirs thought they could cut the network's
program expenses and return it to its low-cost and edgy-program youth
roots. Again history has shown this strategy has not worked. Since
2010 when their investment was made the company's financial performance
and share price have plummeted.
The digital channels run by competitors began to look just
like the mainstream Ten product. It was a feeding frenzy for advertisers
that bid down rates for what appeared to be homogenous product.
Reputations are riding on the outcome - in particular that of Lachlan
Murdoch.
While the icing of One as a sports channel has played out
well for Packer, Murdoch's upside rests exclusively with restoring the
network's fortunes.
And in television there is no quick fix. It has
strategy-to-outcome lead times more akin with the mining industry than a
service business.
McLennan will need to find his strategy, refine his team,
find the audience pitch and come up with a list of new programs that
resonate with viewers.
It then needs more than a year of ratings performance before
media buyers will start to allocate advertising. At the same time he
will need to keep a handle on costs.
theage.com.au 5 Mar 2013
The policy with regards to globalisation and a new world order is to favour the chosen multinationals who are part of the ruling elite, to the detriment of the general populous.
The ACCC currently supports the actions of the supermarket duopoly, to the detriment of the consumer with the petrol discounting.
To the lay man or the Joe Average an authority may seem useless or even spineless, but is following the orders that ultimately bring (official) slavery of the masses to the system.
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