Search Site

Trends banner

Tesla’s first Saudi showroom opens

The opening in Riyadh comes with Tesla sales dropping.

Mubadala Energy enters US energy market

Acquires a 24.1% interest in US firm Kimmeridge’s SoTex

Borouge to increase dividend from 2025

The company okayed $650 million final dividend for 2024.

TikTok’s US future uncertain

It must find non-Chinese owner to avoid ban.

Tesla Q1 sales sink 13 percent

The dip occurred amid lower production during factory upgrades.

Sony to decide on Zee merger

Sony's video game segment scored a hit with "Marvel's Spider-Man 2", released in October last year on the PS5. (AFP)
  • The merger was first agreed in 2021, with Zee chief executive Punit Goenka saying that the new outfit would be worth close to $10 billion with annual revenues approaching $2bn.
  • But closing the deal has been beset by problems, most recently because Sony reportedly does not want Goenka to run the combined entity.

Tokyo, Japan — Sony was expected Friday to make a final decision on a merger of its Indian unit with local rival Zee Entertainment, a source at the Japanese giant and press reports said.

The tie-up is aimed at helping both firms compete with streaming rivals like Disney, Amazon and Netflix in the vast and booming entertainment market of 1.4 billion people.

The merger was first agreed in 2021, with Zee chief executive Punit Goenka saying that the new outfit would be worth close to $10 billion with annual revenues approaching $2 billion.

But closing the deal has been beset by problems, most recently because Sony reportedly does not want Goenka to run the combined entity.

Goenka has offered to step down after the merger takes place, the Economic Times daily reported, but is in favour of an “independent search process” to find a new CEO.

Sony, however, wants NP Singh, the CEO of its India unit, to replace him.

In addition, Sony has become concerned about slumping profits at Zee since 2021, a source at the Japanese firm who declined to be named told AFP.

The Economic Times reported earlier last week that Sony was also upset over not being kept in the loop over a $1.5-billion cricket licensing agreement between Zee and Disney.

Sony’s board on Friday could also decide on extending a January 20 deadline to close the deal in order to allow for more negotiations.

A decision could be announced to the Tokyo stock exchange next week.

India’s entertainment market, worth tens of billions of dollars, is already one of the world’s biggest, while smartphone adoption is forecast to expand further in the coming years.

A collapsed deal will leave Sony and Zee more vulnerable at a time when billionaire Mukesh Ambani-led Reliance is negotiating a merger with Disney’s India unit, Bloomberg News reported.