T&T Makes $56 Billion Offer To Acquire MediaOne Group
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AT&T Corp. Thursday unveiled a $56 billion offer for MediaOne Group Inc. aimed at thwarting a deal reached last month by MediaOne and Comcast Corp.
The telecommunications giant offered to pay a minimum of $85 a share in cash and stock for MediaOne, a premium of 22.3% over MediaOne's closing price of $69.50 Thursday. AT&T said it would pay $30.85 in cash plus 0.95 share of its stock for every MediaOne share. AT&T additionally would assume $4.5 billion in debt and preferred equity.
AT&T put the value of the deal at $58 billion, exclusive of debt, based on the value of its shares at the close of trading in New York. But after the deal was announced, AT&T shares fell in composite trading to finish the day at $56.75.
C. Michael Armstrong, AT&T's chairman and chief executive, said in a letter to MediaOne Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Charles M. Lillis that AT&T's offer is clearly superior to Comcast's in terms of value and growth prospects.
AT&T said that its offer represents a healthy premium over the current value of Comcast's offer -- and it pointed out that unlike Comcast, AT&T is offering cash as well as stock. Based on Thursday closing price, Comcast's deal would be worth about $48 billion.
The cash portion of the AT&T offer is structured to protect MediaOne shareholders against some fluctuation in AT&T's stock price. AT&T said its offer will be increased to offset up to a 10% decline from AT&T's closing stock price of $57 per share on April 21, maintaining a value of $85 for every MediaOne share if AT&T's stock trades between $57 and $51.30 per share, the company said. If AT&T's stock price increases, MediaOne shareholders would enjoy the full upside appreciation. AT&T said the stock portion of the offer will be tax-free to MediaOne shareholders.
The deal would further AT&T's already-ambitious plans to harness the next generation of cable-TV infrastructure to deliver a suite of services including local phone service and broadband Internet access. Those plans were cemented by AT&T's landmark June 1998 acquisition of cable giant Tele-Communications Inc.
"This acquisition is not only an investment in AT&T's future," said Mr. Armstrong. "It's also an investment in the future of a competitive communications market in the U.S."
The combination of AT&T and MediaOne "means that far more American consumers will have a choice in local phone service," he said, adding that "together, AT&T and MediaOne will bring broadband video, voice and data services to more communities, more quickly than we could separately or, in MediaOne's case, with any other company."
Last month Comcast unveiled an offer to buy MediaOne in an all-stock deal valued at $48.63 billion when it was announced. The deal would give Comcast about 11 million subscribers, just behind the 12 million-plus subscribers claimed by market leaders Time Warner Inc. and AT&T.
Neither MediaOne nor Comcast officials were immediately available for comment.
MediaOne is the former arm of regional Bell company U S West Inc., Denver. In addition to its five million cable-TV subscribers, MediaOne has a 25.5% interest in Time Warner Entertainment, which includes Time Warner's cable systems, HBO, and the Warner Bros. movie studio.
Cable operators have been racing to become broadband companies, offering customers interactive video, local and long-distance telephone services, high-speed data connections and Internet-access services. Comcast itself has been on a deal-making tear for several years, aiming to consolidate a slew of video, programming and Internet assets.
The deal, if accepted, would bring together two competing services bent on bringing high-speed Internet access to the home via cable-TV lines. MediaOne's Road Runner service, which it operates with partner Time Warner, is a rival to At Home Corp., whose controlling shareholder is AT&T. Comcast has backed At Home, but Comcast's and MediaOne's executives conceded the issue caused friction during merger talks and they ultimately decided to put it off until after the deal closed.
AT&T said it plans to issue 626 million additional shares in the transaction and expects dilution to earnings per share of approximately 30 cents in the first full year of combined operation, resulting from additional shares outstanding and the cost of financing, partially offset by expense reductions and synergies. Following the purchase of MediaOne, cash earnings, which is net income per share plus acquisition goodwill, will decline by less than 10 cents per share, AT&T said, adding that the acquisition over time will accelerate earnings, cash flow and revenue growth. The company also said the deal would reduce the percentage of AT&T's revenues that come from slower growth businesses such as consumer long distance.
AT&T said it is confident in its ability to complete the acquisition by the end of 1999.
The telecommunications giant said it plans to sell certain non-strategic MediaOne assets currently valued at about $18 billion to $20 billion, and continue its "aggressive efforts" to reduce overall AT&T operating expenses by an additional $2 billion by the end of 2000.
Savings of at least $175 million to $200 million are expected from combining the former TCI and MediaOne cable operations, it said.
AT&T said the majority of the expense reductions will be in network costs, lower access fees paid to local exchange companies for handling long-distance calls and more streamlined operations and systems.
AT&T said the acquisition of MediaOne would extend its cable reach to more than 26.5 million households and expand its national coverage in key markets such as Boston, Atlanta, and Los Angeles. |