Comcast and Disney Move Up Hulu Sale Talks Date to Sept. 30, Roberts Claims Hulu Worth Well More Than $30 Billion
Comcast and Disney last week signed a modification to their agreement to bring forward the timing of their sale talks for Comcasts stake in Hulu to Sept. 30, Comcast CEO Brian Roberts said.
Currently, Comcast owns one-third of Hulu and had set a pact with Disney (which owns the other two-thirds) to begin talks to sell its stake to the Mouse House in January 2024.
Speaking at the Goldman Sachs Communacopia + Technology investor conference Wednesday, Roberts said all the synergies around Hulu could be worth $30 billion, before you even ascribe value to Hulu itself. The previous minimum $27.5 billion valuation for Hulu was a hypothetical set when Disney had control of the company, per Roberts, with the company way more valuable today than it was when that number was set five years ago.
Roberts said proceeds from Comcasts sale of its Hulu stake would be returned to shareholders.
Weve seen analyst reports that a buyer, depending on who they were, if it was to scale them up, they could have a couple billion dollars, or who knows what, of synergy, Roberts said. Just that piece of the synergy and the churn benefit could be worth $30 billion. And thats before you ascribe any value to the actual Hulu. And of course when you go into one of these really robust auctions and I think if you were selling all of this as-is thered be a line of bidders around the block to actually buy all the content, all the bundling of Hulu, that that business weve never seen. And so usually buyers in robust auctions pay for it all, and the seller gets all the benefits of the synergy.
Roberts disclosed that Goldman Sachs has been brought into the appraisal process, and that it will take a little time for this to play out, but both companies wanted to get it behind us so we pulled the date forward.
The Comcast CEO did not give a timeline for the sale from there, but said both companies are well served to have clarity for our investors.
No ones ever sold a pure play or auctioned off a pure-play streaming asset thats in this kind of position; thats a scarce, kingmaker asset, Roberts said.
During his session at the conference, Roberts was asked for his thoughts on the Disney-Charter dispute, and the CEO offered that he is not completely surprised.
When you have many distributors of the same product and in a geography, youre gonna have disputes between the content and distribution, Roberts said, noting that Comcast sees its own business as not linear or streaming, but linear and streaming.
Its not the first dispute and probably wont be the last dispute, Roberts said. Clearly, we all know the video ecosystem is changing. I think [Comcast] is really well positioned for that change, but change can have disruption and, ultimately, I hope people are looking at, what is the consumer saying? I think the consumer wants simplicity, somebody to help aggregate and have the most bang for their buck. This dispute is putting tension around some of those issues. I hope they work it out. I think thats in the interest of consumers.