April 24, 2024

DealBook: BSkyB Plans Share Buyback and Higher Dividend

James R. Murdoch, chairman of British Sky BroadcastingDavid Moir/ReutersJames R. Murdoch won the backing of British Sky Broadcasting’s board on Thursday to retain his role as chairman.

LONDON – British Sky Broadcasting, the satellite television company partly owned by Rupert Murdoch, said on Friday it would buy back some of its own shares and increase the dividend to compensate investors.

BSkyB, as the company is also known, said it planned a share buyback worth £750 million, or $1.2 billion, and would return another £253 million to shareholders through a final dividend of 14.54 pence a share.

BSkyB’s shares dropped more than 15 percent since News Corporation cancelled its bid this month for the 61 percent of BSkyB it does not own because of political opposition following the growing phone hacking scandal at one of News Corporation’s British tabloid newspapers. News Corporation, Rupert Murdoch’s global media empire, would participate in the share buyback, meaning its 39 percent stake in BskyB would not increase.

BSkyB also said its board unanimously voted in favor of keeping James R. Murdoch, Rupert Murdoch’s son and a senior executive at News Corporation, in his job as chairman of BskyB’s board. It was the board’s first meeting since News Corporation was forced to abandon its BSkyB bid.

“It was obviously a very full discussion,” BSkyB’s chief executive, Jeremy Darroch, said on a conference call. “At the end of that, the board was unanimous in its support for James to continue as chairman.”

Pressure on James Murdoch and BSkyB’s board to replace him had mounted ever since the appearance of new allegations of phone hacking at the British tabloid The News of the World, which fell under James Murdoch’s remit at News Corporation.

Mr. Darroch told the BBC in an interview on Friday that James Murdoch “got strong support” at BSkyB. He added that judging by his work at BSkyB, “he always acted with the highest degree of integrity.”

But some shareholders, including large British pension funds, have criticized BSkyB’s choice of chairman in the past, saying they would prefer a chairman who was not directly linked to the company’s largest shareholder, News Corporation.

There were signs that the phone hacking scandal also hurt other parts of the Murdoch media empire beyond The News of the World, which was shuttered.

The Times of London lost some subscribers in the immediate aftermath of the phone hacking scandal, James Harding, editor of the newspaper told the BBC on Wednesday. “We saw small number of people cancelled their digital subscription or print subscription,” Mr. Harding said. “Those have largely come back.”

BSkyB, which owns several satellite channels, said on Friday that operating profit for the full year that ended in June rose 23 percent to £1.07 billion from £872 million a year earlier. That beat the average £1.06 billion in profit analysts surveyed by Thomson Reuters predicted. BSkyB’s shares rose 0.5 percent in London on Friday.

“Recent hysteria may have affected the share price,” Richard Hunter at Hargreaves Lansdown Stockbrokers in London wrote in a note to clients. “But the underlying business remains defiantly strong.”

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=d813281065faa0b3086117be7eb553dc

BSkyB Board Backs James R. Murdoch to Stay as Chairman

The board of British Sky Broadcasting, a satellite television company known as BSkyB, discussed James Murdoch’s role “at length” and decided he should keep the job, said a person with direct knowledge of the decision. The board planned to closely monitor developments linked to the phone hacking scandal, said the person, who declined to be identified because the meeting was private.

It was the first time BSkyB’s 14-member board had met since a public and political outcry over phone hacking at The News of the World, the now shuttered tabloid, forced News Corporation, the global media company controlled by James Murdoch’s father, Rupert Murdoch, to withdraw its offer for the rest of BSkyB.

News Corporation owns a 39 percent stake in BSkyB.

The board meeting had been initially scheduled to discuss BSkyB’s annual earnings, which are to be released on Friday, but the phone hacking scandal had obliged it to also address the question of whether James Murdoch should stay on as chairman. James and Rupert Murdoch faced angry questions from British lawmakers this month about how much they knew about phone hacking practices at The News of the World.

Keeping James Murdoch on the board of BSkyB, one of the best-performing and most important parts of News Corporation’s British business, is essential to the Murdoch family’s media empire, some analysts said. James Murdoch runs News Corporation’s European operations, which include the BSkyB stake and News International, the newspaper group that published The News of the World. He is also News Corporation’s deputy chief operating officer.

Pressure on James Murdoch intensified last week when two former News International executives contradicted testimony he had given to a parliamentary committee. The executives said that in 2008 they had made Mr. Murdoch aware of evidence that suggested phone hacking at The News of the World was more widespread. Mr. Murdoch denied he had ever been told that underlying evidence in the case implicated more than one reporter at the tabloid.

James Murdoch became chairman of BSkyB’s board, which also includes three other members who are on the News Corporation’s payroll, at the end of 2007, amid opposition from some institutional investors and pension funds. Some shareholders criticized the election process and said they would have preferred a chairman who was not linked to BSkyB’s biggest shareholder.

Lorna Tilbian, an analyst at Numis Securities in London, said James Murdoch’s support among BSkyB’s board members did not come as a surprise. “He’s done a good job as BSkyB’s chairman, and it’s innocent until proven guilty,” Ms. Tilbian said.

The phone hacking scandal might affect BSkyB in other ways. Ofcom, the British broadcasting regulator, is proceeding with inquiries into whether BSkyB remains “fit and proper” to hold a broadcasting license because of the hacking scandal still unfolding at the News Corporation.

The scandal took a toll on BSkyB’s share price because some investors were concerned that new investigations into phone hacking and bribery allegations could distract management. BSkyB’s shares slumped 16 percent from their peak this month. The shares remained unchanged at 7.2 pounds in London on Thursday.

BSkyB’s board also discussed whether  to either  pay a special dividend or buy back its own shares to compensate BSkyB shareholders, which include News Corporation, for the recent drop in the share price.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/29/world/europe/29bskyb.html?partner=rss&emc=rss