Sony ‘terminates’ Indian merger with Zee

(FILES) This file photo taken on January 31, 2023 shows the Sony logo outside the company’s headquarters in Tokyo. – Sony confirmed on January 22, 2024 that it is pulling out a merger of its Indian business with local rival Zee Entertainment. (Photo by Philip FONG / AFP)

By Simon Sturdee with Anuj Srivas in Mumbai


TOKYO, Jan 22, 2024 (AFP)
– Sony “terminated” on Monday the $10-billion merger of its Indian operations with local rival Zee Entertainment that would have created a new streaming giant in the world’s most populous nation.

The joint entity with mooted annual revenue of $2 billion would have helped both firms better compete with Disney, Amazon and Netflix in the entertainment market of 1.4 billion people.

But with reports that Sony was unhappy with Zee’s performance since the merger was agreed in late 2021, the Japanese giant said Monday that conditions to close the deal “were not satisfied”.

Another stumbling block was reportedly Zee’s insistence that its chief executive Punit Goenka, son of founder Subhash Chandra, run the combined entity.

Both men are being probed by India’s financial markets regulator over alleged fraud. They deny any wrongdoing.

Zee said Monday that Goenka “was agreeable to step down in the interest of the merger” and that it proposed an extension of up to six months to close the deal.

It added in a statement that Sony was also seeking a “termination fee” of $90 million for alleged breaches by Zee, a claim that the Indian company said it “categorically refutes”.

Vivekanand Subbaraman, a media analyst at Ambit Capital, said Zee would now have to “go back to the drawing board” and would be short of capital.

“Sony was going to infuse $1.3 billion into the merger… Also, from an opportunity standpoint, it wasn’t just TV. It was also digital where Zee was struggling,” Subbaraman told AFP before Monday’s announcement.

He added that Sony LIV, the Japanese firm’s streaming service, had been “more successful” and was a “bigger business” than Zee’s Zee5.

“With reports of the RIL-Disney merger, the competitive landscape and overall market condition looks very different now than before,” Subbaraman added.

The Bombay stock market was closed for a public holiday but over the past month Zee’s shares have fallen 13.6 percent and more than 30 percent in the past two years.

The announcement came after the Tokyo market closed, with Sony up 1.89 percent at 14,800 yen.