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  • News Corp officially splits

    Submitted by ITV Production on Jun 29, 2013
    indiantelevision.com Team

    MUMBAI: News Corp formally split in two after the market closed on Friday, with existing shareholders getting one share in the new publishing entity for every four shares they hold in the media company.

    Since Wednesday last week, preliminary shares of both sides of the company have been trading as if the split already occurred. Any buyers of preliminary shares will receive them next Friday.

    Preliminary publishing shares closed Friday at $15.25.

    The recent trading valued the publishing division, to be named News Corp, at around $8.8 billion. This is approximately 12 per cent of the entire company?s value. It had a market capitalisation of about $75.5 billion before the split.

    The movie and TV division is being renamed Twenty-First Century Fox. Its preliminary stock closed at $28.99 on Friday.

    Shares of both entities will begin trading normally on Monday, with new News Corp shares trading under the tickers "NWSA" for non-voting Class A shares and "NWS" for voting Class B shares. Twenty-First Century Fox shares will trade under the tickers "FOXA" for non-voting Class A shares and "FOX" for voting Class B shares.

    Rupert Murdoch, who will be chairman of both companies and CEO of Twenty-First Century Fox, will retain his grip on both companies by controlling nearly 40 per cent of the voting stock in each.

    The split completes a process that the company announced a year ago, and responds to investor concerns that the newspaper and book publishing divisions were dragging on the faster growing pay TV business.

    By separating, the publishing division can devote resources toward engineering a turnaround, while the Fox side focuses on launching a national sports network to be called Fox Sports 1 that will compete with pay TV leader ESPN.

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  • UTV shareholders approve delisting of shares

    Submitted by ITV Production on Sep 05, 2011
    indiantelevision.com Team

    MUMBAI: UTV Software Communication said Monday its shareholders have agreed for voluntary delisting of equity shares from the stock exchanges.

    UTV had asked for shareholders? approval via postal ballot for voluntary delisting following The Walt Disney?s proposal to take full control of the company and delist it.

    UTV disclosed that it received a total of 25.70 million shares in favour of the proposal, out of which 4.9 million were from public shareholders. The company also received 99,738 votes from the public shareholders against the proposal of delisting.

    However, the proposal was approved by 49.1:1 ratio.

    On 26 July, UTV announced that the Walt Disney Company (Southest Asia) Pte is making an offer at a ceiling price of Rs 1000 per share for the remaining 49.56 per cent that will give the global media giant complete hold of UTV?s movie making, television broadcasting and gaming businesses.

    Disney is going to pay Rs 20.13 billion to buy out the public shareholders and the founder-promoters.

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    UTV
  • NDTV's Rs 1billion IPO to fund working cap, prepay loan

    MUMBAI: Dr Prannoy Roy's NDTV is gearing up for its first Rs 1 billion equity issue in the primary market.

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