Sony to form TV pact with NextLevel, invest $188 million
Reuters Story - January 05, 1998 15:41
(Adds analyst comment, details, byline) By Susan Nadeau CHICAGO, Jan 5 (Reuters) - Consumer electronics giant Sony Corp. and NextLevel Systems Inc. said Monday they will join forces to create advanced digital TV set-top boxes with far more computing power and capabilities than current models. As part of the deal, which requires the signing of definitive agreements and approval by NextLevel shareholders, Sony will pay around $188 million for about a 5 percent stake in the cable TV set-top box maker. The move would give the Japanese electronics giant a foothold in rapidly changing television technology and in the cable TV market in the United States. For NextLevel, which is changing its name back to General Instrument Corp., the pact would mean access to Sony's established presence in retail stores. Set-top boxes are currently provided to cable watchers by cable TV operators. "In the U.S., cable television will play an important role in bringing digital television to the consumer," Gary Myer, president of Sony unit Digital Network Solutions of America, said in a statement. Under the deal, Sony will buy 7.5 million new shares of NextLevel common stock, or about 5 percent of the outstanding shares, at $25 each. NextLevel stock jumped $1.56 to $19.75 in consolidated afternoon trading on the New York Stock Exchange. The price Sony agreed to pay represents a 37 percent premium over NextLevel's closing price of $18.19 Friday, and is well above the stock's 52-week high of $21.44. "It's a significant strategic investment if NextLevel and the cable operators are able to get the equipment and systems geared up to support retail distribution of their products," said Todd Koffman, an analyst with investment bankers Lehman Brothers. "That's not the case right now, and it's probably a couple of years away." The companies said they were exploring a broader business relationship and discussing future generations of digital cable TV devices and high-definition TV products. Sony technology, such as video game equipment and digital video disk (DVD) players, may eventually be integrated into the new set-top boxes. In addition, the boxes will include a computer modem, allowing for high-speed connection to the Internet. "We believe that Sony's expertise in digital consumer electronics and its strong retail brand complement General Instrument's strengths, and will certainly be significant asssets for the development of the next-generation digital set-top (box) based on GI's platform," NextLevel Chairman Edward Breen said in a statement. NextLevel, which is one of three companies that emerged from a strategic reorganization of General Instrument, said two weeks ago that most of the nation's leading cable system operators plan to buy 15 million set-top boxes, valued at about $4.5 billion, over the next three to five years. Sony's 5 percent stake in NextLevel would be in addition to warrants to be issued to cable operators totaling 16 percent of the company, in connection with that agreement. Along with its audio, TV and electronics businesses, Sony owns music, film and video game assets, making it one of the world's largest entertainment companies. It had fiscal 1996 sales of $45 billion. Sony stock closed up 200 yen in Tokyo at 11,800. (--Chicago Equities Desk at 312 408 8787, (chicago.equities.newsroomreuters.com) |