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AT&T-DirecTV merger may hinge on NFL deal
Reuters
May. 20, 2014 2:00 pm, Updated: May. 20, 2014 3:16 pm
If DirecTV is unable to strike a deal with the National Football League to renew the satellite TV operator's contract to offer the popular NFL Sunday Ticket football package, AT&T can pull out of the merger, according to a regulatory filing.
In a filing related to the merger, the companies said, 'the parties also have agreed that in the unlikely event that the Company's agreement for the ‘NFL Sunday Ticket' service is not renewed on substantially the terms discussed between the parties, AT&T may elect not to consummate the merger.”
The current DirecTV offer allows subscribers to watch football games outside of their local markets on Sundays. The exclusive package, which costs subscribers up to $300 a year, is an important tool for DirecTV to attract subscribers and the company has said about 2 million people receive the service.
Investors have been watching closely to see whether DirecTV would renew the Sunday Ticket contract with the NFL, estimated to be worth $1 billion annually, with the potential to rise in value as part of a new agreement.
The filing said that if a renewal isn't struck, AT&T will not be able to claim damages as long as DirecTV used its best efforts to get a deal done with the NFL.
On a conference call with analysts on Monday, DirecTV CEO Mike White said he and AT&T Chief Executive Randall Stephenson had spoken with NFL commissioner Roger Goodell as well as New England Patriots Owner Robert Kraft who heads the league's broadcast committee, and the parties were in 'positive and constructive” discussions with the league.
'I am still highly confident that we are going to get our deal done,” White said, adding he expects a pact to be agreed by the end of the year, which would be before the merger closes.
AT&T has said it expects the merger to take a year to close.
DirecTV satellite dishes are seen on an apartment roof in Los Angeles. AT&T's expected acquisition of DirecTV could provide the company with a pathway to expand its services into Latin America, where the satellite operator has 18 million subscribers and a higher growth rate than in the United States. (REUTERS/Jonathan Alcorn)

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