View Full Version : Murdoch: No Deals for News Corp. in Sun Valley


NewsDude
07-11-2008, 04:10 PM
News Corp. Chairman Rupert Murdoch plans to forgo making deals at this year's Allen & Co. media retreat, dampening the five-day event renowned as an incubator for big-time media and Web combinations.
"Not today, not this week," Murdoch told reporters Wednesday morning on his way to the annual retreat's opening breakfast. Murdoch built his media and entertainment empire through brash dealmaking at Sun Valley and elsewhere, including last year's purchase of Dow Jones Co., publisher of the Wall Street Journal.
Murdoch's presence signifies the importance of the Allen event, but his certainty that no deals are afoot underscores the uneasy times facing many media and Web moguls.
Many of them arrived this year at the closed event with their stock prices at multiyear lows as investors increasingly question how media companies are addressing the loss of advertising revenue to the Web and as Internet firms try to maximize their investments.
Much of the talk at the retreat so far has centered on speculation over the next move in the complex takeover dance between faltering Internet pioneer Yahoo Inc. and its unbidden suitor, Microsoft Corp.
Yahoo CEO Jerry Yang, who rejected a $33-per-share bid from the world's largest software maker in May, saying the company he helped found is worth $37 per share, isn't expected to arrive until Thursday. And billionaire investor Carl Icahn, who owns about 4 percent of Yahoo and has been agitating for a sale, isn't expected at all. Icahn reportedly bought his stake for $25 per share.
Microsoft Corp. dealmaker Henry Vigil, head of strategy and development, looked overwhelmed as photographers circled him when he arrived Tuesday. He did not answer questions from reporters.
Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates is expected Friday.
Bill Miller, whose Legg Mason Capital Management Inc. owns just over 5 percent of Yahoo, said Icahn, who is trying to unseat Yang by...

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