Nine and Fairfax Media announce merger

Nine Entertainment and Fairfax Media have announced plans for Nine to take over the newspaper publisher, creating Australia's largest integrated media company.

Fairfax Media and Nine Entertainment have announced they will merge.

Fairfax Media and Nine Entertainment have announced they will merge. Source: AAP

Nine Entertainment and Fairfax Media have announced plans to merge, creating Australia's largest media player.

Nine shareholders will own 51.1 per cent of the combined entity and Nine CEO Hugh Marks will lead the new company.

Fairfax shareholders will continue to own the remaining 48.9 per cent.

The directors of Fairfax will unanimously recommend Fairfax shareholders vote in favour in the absence of a superior proposal.

"The Fairfax Board has carefully considered the Proposed Transaction and believes it represents compelling value for Fairfax shareholders," Fairfax chairman Nick Falloon said in the statement.

"The directors of Fairfax will unanimously recommend that Fairfax shareholders vote in favour of the Scheme in the absence of a superior proposal."
Fairfax CEO Greg Hywood.
Fairfax CEO Greg Hywood. Source: AAP
Fairfax Media chief executive Greg Hywood announced the merger in a statement to staff this morning.

“Over the last eight years, Fairfax Media has gone from being at the mercy of the non-stop global media revolution to being best of its breed. And that is why Nine wants to merge their business with ours,” he said.

“Working through the detail will take a number of months but you can be assured there be plenty of Fairfax Media DNA in the merged company and the Board.

“It is business as usual as we move through the necessary details… at the end of this process, the business will be a media company of scale, depth of offering and digital capacity and opportunities like no other in our region.”

The two media bosses addressed a conference call this morning, with Mr Hywood telling reporters the companies were "pretty hopeful" the ACCC would allow the deal to go ahead.

"I think that this deal, this proposed deal, is well within the spirit of the Government's legislation last year," he said.

“If you look at the integration of these businesses, there's not a lot of areas of competitive overlap.”

If it also secures the blessing of shareholders, the deal is likely to take “some months” before it is finalised, Mr Hywood said.

According to a statement to the ASX, the two media companies have entered into a Scheme Implementation Agreement.

Three current Fairfax directors will be invited to join the board of the combined business, which will be chaired by Nine Chairman, Peter Costello and two current Nine directors.

"The combination of our businesses and our people best positions us to deliver new opportunities and innovations for our shareholders, staff and all Australians in the years ahead," Mr Costello said.

Merger talks were floated earlier this year, however, a deal reportedly fell through.

Media reforms passed the Senate late last year, paving the way for cross-platform mergers.


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3 min read
Published 26 July 2018 11:04am
Updated 30 July 2018 9:40am
By Leesha McKenny
Presented by Helen Chen


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