Bell rivals cry foul over Astral takeover
Move would be 'bad for consumers and bad for Canada,' consortium member says
CBC News
Posted: Aug 7, 2012 10:18 AM ET
Last Updated: Aug 7, 2012 8:35 PM ET
Quebecor CEO Pierre Karl Peladeau says Bell's takeover of Astral Media will lead to higher prices for consumers. (CP)
Need to Know
- Bell says deal is within CRTC rules
Related
Some of Eastern Canada's largest media companies take issue with BCE Inc.'s proposed takeover of Astral Media, saying the deal would lead to higher costs for consumers and hurt Canadian culture.
The heads of broadcaster Quebecor Inc., cable company Cogeco Cable Inc. and telecom firm Eastlink held a news conference in Ottawa on Tuesday morning to urge Ottawa to nix the transaction, announced in March, whereby Bell would buy the assets of Montreal-based Astral Media for $3.4 billion.
If approved, the combined Bell/Astral media conglomerate would own 79 television channels, 107 radio stations and more than 100 websites across the country. Astral owns radio stations as well as specialty channels and pay-TV networks, including The Movie Network and HBO Canada.
In a release Tuesday, the consortium opposed to the deal said Bell would control 45 per cent of English-language television audiences and 35 per cent of French-language television audiences.
"Giving one private broadcaster so dominant a share of the television market is bad for consumers and bad for Canada," Eastlink CEO Lee Bragg said.
Shareholders approve
Shareholders of both companies have already approved the deal, but the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission and other government regulators must still rule on the transaction.
In full-page newspaper ads that ran across the country Tuesday, Bell's rivals claim the larger Bell would control a greater percentage of the audience than that of the largest media company in other industrialized nations, including the U.S., Japan, the U.K., Australia, France and Russia.
"If Bell Canada controls the most popular content, they could charge you whatever they want to watch it," reads the ad, signed by Cogeco CEO Louis Audet, Bragg and Quebecor president Pierre Karl Peladeau. "Advertising rates could also go up — costs that eventually get passed on to consumers."
"Competition will be severely reduced and the broadcast market as we know it in Canada will be handcuffed," Peladeau said Tuesday.
Later Tuesday, the Competition Bureau confirmed that it is looking at the proposed deal. "The bureau is aware that a number of serious concerns have been expressed by market participants related to the effect that increased concentration and vertical integration in the broadcasting industry are said to be having on consumers and other television programming providers," Commissioner Melanie Aitken said in a release.
"While the bureau is required by law to conduct its work confidentially, I can confirm that we are actively reviewing these concerns," her statement read.
While Bell has a strong stable of properties in Ontario and the West, the proposed Astral takeover would buttress the company's presence in Quebec and Eastern Canada significantly. With Astral's properties, Bell would control approximately one-third of viewership in Quebec — just shy of the percentage that Quebecor controls.
For its part, Bell says the transaction is well within the regulator's rules and would indeed give the company a smaller stake than Quebecor in some markets.
"After the Bell-Astral transaction, our national viewership share will be 33.5 per cent for English TV and 24 per cent for French," BCE spokesperson Marie-Eve Francoeur said in a statement to CBC News. "Both are within the CRTC threshold of 35 per cent, below which transactions can go ahead without concern.
"We’re actually levelling the playing field … in Quebec and that clearly has our competitor concerned."
Share Tools
Top News Headlines
- Toronto mayor's brother says he never dealt drugs
- The brother of Toronto Mayor Rob Ford has vehemently denied allegations in Saturday's Globe and Mail that he was involved in the illicit drug trade in the 1980s. more »
- Hockey Canada votes to ban bodychecking in peewee hockey
- Hockey Canada's board of directors voted to eliminate bodychecking from peewee-level hockey on Saturday in Charlottetown. more »
- Neil Macdonald: How serious is Obama about curbing the drone surge?
- In a key speech this week, the U.S. president set out a host of supposed new safeguards for America's controversial practice of remote-controlled rough justice. But as Neil Macdonald writes, the underlying rationale for drone use has not fundamentally changed. more »
- Ontario man lost in Australian mountains has survival skills
- The sister of an Ontario man who disappeared in Australia's Snowy Mountains nearly two weeks ago says she remains hopeful he will be found, partly because of his training as a Canadian Forces reservist. more »
Must Watch
Latest Business Headlines
- Growing appetite for American whisky straining supply
- Fans of some American whiskies might soon be scrambling to find their favourite brand because of a seemingly insatiable demand for bourbon, rye and other styles of whisky that shows no sign of abating. more »
- Royal Bank pledges not to outsource jobs for cash savings
- Royal Bank has promised it will never outsource a Canadian job to a foreign worker solely to save money. more »
- Canada threatens retaliation over U.S. meat-labelling rules
- The federal government is threatening "retaliatory measures" against the United States in a dispute over meat-labelling rules that Ottawa and the World Trade Organization consider discriminatory. more »
- Canada ranks 3rd last in paid vacations
- Canada ranks third last among economically advanced countries in the amount of paid vacation time it guarantees its workers, a new U.S. study indicates. more »
Lang & O'Leary Exchange
Markets
| Index | Last Trade | Change |
|---|---|---|
| TSX COMPOSITE | 12667.22 | 9.13 |
| DOW | 15303.10 | 8.60 |
| NASDAQ | 3459.14 | -0.28 |
| SP 500 | 1649.60 | -0.91 |
| TSX-VENTURE | 948.32 | 6.27 |
The data on this site is informational only and may be delayed; it is not intended as trading or investment advice and you should not rely on it as such.
- Toronto mayor's brother says he never dealt drugs
- NYPD investigating Amanda Bynes sex assault allegations
- 3 more suspects arrested in slaying of U.K. soldier
- McDonald's CEO chastised by 9-year-old B.C. girl
- Dog snared on baited hooks near Vancouver's Grouse Grind trail
- Retired police officer killed in Mexico remembered as animal lover
- Ontario man lost in Australian mountains has survival skills
- Canadian mine giant Barrick fined a record $16.4M in Chile
- Black bear breaks into North Vancouver chicken coop

