UK regulator puts hurdle in path of Murdoch's $15.7 billion Sky deal

FILE PHOTO: The Twenty-First Century Fox Studios flag flies over the company building in Los Angeles, California U.S. on November 6, 2017. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson/File Photo · Reuters

By Paul Sandle and Kate Holton

LONDON (Reuters) - Rupert Murdoch's $15.7 billion takeover of European broadcaster Sky should be blocked unless a way is found to prevent the media tycoon from influencing the network's news output, Britain's competition regulator said.

The initial ruling complicates a separate plan by Walt Disney Co to buy the majority of Murdoch's assets, including Sky. Disney had hoped Murdoch would own 100 percent of the company by the time it completed its takeover.

Shares in Sky rose on Tuesday as investors said concerns about Murdoch's influence could still be overcome, for example by spinning off Sky News, Britain's first 24-hour news channel. The regulator also indicated it would not object to Disney owning Sky eventually.

"It's good news today that the regulator isn't going to block the deal outright," said Michael Wegener, managing director at Case Equity Partners, a Sky shareholder.

"The Murdochs will come up with remedies that work around Sky News."

Murdoch's Twenty-First Century Fox agreed to buy the 61 percent of Sky it did not already own in December 2016, re-igniting a political row in Britain about the influence he wields through his ownership of newspapers the Sun and the Times and his stake in Sky, the biggest pay-TV platform.

Critics of the deal argue that Murdoch could hold sway over the editorial output of Sky's loss making news channel. Sky warned that were the deal to be rejected because of Sky News, it could shut the channel itself.

The British government, which will take the final decision on the deal, asked the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) to judge if Murdoch had too much influence in Britain and would uphold broadcasting standards.

"We have provisionally found that if the Fox/Sky merger went ahead as proposed, it would be against the public interest," the CMA's Anne Lambert said on Tuesday.

"It would result in the Murdoch family having too much control over news providers in the UK, and too much influence over public opinion and the political agenda."

A WAY OUT?

Murdoch's news outlets are watched, read or heard by nearly a third of Britons and have a combined share of public news consumption that is significantly greater than all other news providers, except the BBC and commercial TV news provider ITN.

Possible ways to resolve concerns about Murdoch's influence in Britain could include spinning off or divesting Sky News, or insulating Sky News from Fox's influence, the CMA said. A third option is to block the deal outright.

On the issue of broadcasting standards, the regulator cleared Murdoch, saying that recent allegations of sexual harassment at his Fox News network in the United States did not call into question his commitment to standards in Britain.