In rebuff to Disney, Comcast signals Hulu will not come cheap

Reuters

Published Sep 14, 2022 10:46PM ET

Updated Sep 14, 2022 11:11PM ET

By Helen Coster and Dawn Chmielewski

(Reuters) - Comcast Corp (NASDAQ:CMCSA) Chief Executive Brian Roberts used the unusually public forum of a Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS) Communacopia + Technology Conference on Wednesday to signal that the company will seek market value for its minority stake in Hulu.

Roberts was asked to respond to Walt Disney (NYSE:DIS) Co Chief Executive Bob Chapek's comments to the Financial Times published on Monday in which he said he would like to accelerate the timetable for acquiring Comcast's one-third stake in Hulu.

Chapek said he would love to settle the matter of Hulu sooner than January 2024 but he told the publication that Comcast has seemed reluctant. It’s a sentiment the executive repeated Wednesday, in remarks at the Goldman Sachs conference.

The deal, reached in 2019, established a minimum valuation of $27.5 billion for Hulu, in a transaction that would give Disney complete ownership of the service. Chapek noted that market sentiment has cooled significantly since the original agreement was struck and investors have grown more skeptical about streaming, suggesting a more modest payout.

In his response to Chapek’s remarks, Roberts touted the value of Hulu, suggesting that the streaming service, with its 46 million subscribers and established brand, would command a premium. He said the agreement with Disney anticipates that Hulu’s valuation would reflect the price it could command if it were sold on the market.