21st Century Fox agrees to Sell 39% Stake In Sky for $40 Billion

21st century Fox
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Justin Lane/Epa/REX/Shutterstock (8135957d) A View of a Sign at the Offices of '21st Century Fox' in New York New York Usa 09 December 2016 21st Century Fox Has Put Forth a Takeover Bid For the United Kingdom-based Media Company Sky United States New York Usa New York 21st Century Fox - Dec 2016

Rupert Murdoch’s 21st Century Fox said Wednesday it had agreed to sell its 39 per cent stake in Sky to Comcast, giving the US cable and media giant full control of the British television giant.

The move comes days after Comcast made a successful bid of £30.6 billion ($40 billion) for a controlling stake in Sky.

Fox, which is in the process of selling key media-entertainment assets to Walt Disney Co., said in a statement that Disney had agreed to the sale of the stake, worth an estimated $15 billion.

The agreement ends a long-running battle for control of Sky by Murdoch in the face of resistance by British regulators and firms up the new landscape in the sector with Comcast in control of Sky and Disney set to expand its footprint with television and film assets from Fox.

The deals enable Murdoch, 87, who has been gradually turning over control of his media empire to his two sons, to slim down his holding to focus on a “new Fox” that would include the US-based broadcast network and Fox News Channel.

Sky broadcasts blockbuster films and drama including cult US series “Games of Thrones” and has lucrative rights to English Premier League football.

The London-listed group, which has a subscription base of 23 million, is widely regarded as one of Europe’s most profitable and powerful TV companies.

Comcast and Disney had been in a bidding war for the Fox assets, which include the Fox studios in Hollywood and important film and television production operations.

Comcast eventually dropped its effort and allowed Disney to win with a bid of $71.3 billion.

Disney said in a statement the latest deal would “significantly reduce” the debt needed to take over the Fox holdings and would enable it to invest more in “content creation for its direct-to-consumer platforms.”

Disney and Fox have entered into a consent decree with the US Department of Justice that allows the acquisition to proceed, conditioned on the sale of Fox Sports Regional Networks.