Reliance Industries and Walt Disney have sought antitrust clearance for their $8.5 billion India media merger by arguing their combined power, especially on cricket broadcasting, will not hit advertisers, two people with direct knowledge told Reuters.
The deal, announced in February, has been expected by experts to face intense scrutiny as it will create India’s biggest entertainment player with 120 TV channels and two streaming services. It will also own lucrative rights for cricket, India’s top sport, a Reuters report from New Delhi stated yesterday.
Reliance and Disney have told the Competition Commission of India (CCI) the cricket rights were obtained separately under a bidding process which was competitive, said the two sources, who declined to be named as the approval process is confidential.
The companies argue other competitors won’t be harmed as they can bid when those rights expire in 2027 and 2028, the sources added.
The CCI will now review the confidential filing. Though any clearance typically takes several weeks, it can take longer if the watchdog isn’t satisfied and seeks more information.
Reliance, Walt Disney and the CCI did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
Disney and Reliance currently own digital and TV cricket rights worth billions of dollars for the world’s most valuable cricket tournament the Indian Premier League, International Cricket Council matches and those of the Indian cricket board, the Reuters report added.
That has raised concerns the merged entity could have high leverage over advertisers and consumers, with K.K Sharma, a former head of mergers at CCI, saying in March the regulator could be concerned as “hardly anything of cricket will be left” as Disney-Reliance will have “absolute control over cricket”.
Jefferies has estimated the Disney-Reliance entity will command a 40 percent share of the advertising market in TV and streaming segments.
The companies have told the CCI in their filing there will be no impact on advertisers as cricket-watching consumers can be targeted on many rival platforms where they also consume content, including YouTube and Meta, the sources said.
Similarly, the companies have said, Indians consume content across TV channels, social media and streaming apps, and advertisers will not be disadvantaged by the deal.
The deal is set to reshape India’s $28 billion media and entertainment market, where the Reliance-Disney combo will compete with Netflix, Amazon Prime, Zee Entertainment and Sony.
Shashi Shekhar Vempati gets Padma Shri honour
TV channels steady, DTH shrinks; telecom, b’band subs up Jan-Mar quarter
MIFF premieres animated series on India’s women trailblazers
Network18 reaches 250mn TV viewers, crosses 65bn social video views: Akash Ambani
MIFF panel agrees youngsters driving documentary renaissance
ZEE5 brings cricket-fuelled drama ‘Mammatiyaan Stars’ on June 26
Zee Marathi revives ‘Home Minister’,‘Sa Re Ga Ma Pa’
Vertigo TV, ADMOTT partner to tap growing micro-drama market
Indian Govt says Telegram being monitored for content breaches 


