Premier League nets GBP1.4bn TV rights bonanza

Global broadcasting deals double in value after bidding war, shattering 
expectations / Clubs in line for extra GBP13m each per year, by Nick Harris, 
from The (UK) Independent

The Premier League's sale of its overseas broadcasting rights for 2010-13 will 
raise around GBP1.4bn, more than double the previous level of GBP625m, The 
Independent can reveal.

With just two deals left to be concluded - in Albania and Russia - the League 
is 
assured of raising each club's average annual income from overseas rights alone 
from GBP10m now to about GBP23m per season from this summer. That leap of 
GBP13m 
per club per year will not necessarily be split evenly. Some of the new cash 
will bankroll increased parachute payments, up from GBP11.2m last year to 
GBP16m 
from this summer. Parachute money will probably also be extended beyond the 
current two years. The League is finalising details on that, as well as how 
much 
extra money it might give the Football League in "solidarity payments". It 
currently gives the 72 Football League clubs GBP21.6m per year combined for a 
variety of academy, community and club projects.

The overseas rights bonanza underlines the global appeal of England's top 
football division, and has been fuelled by intense bidding wars in key areas, 
mainly between pay-TV rivals in Asia.

The Abu Dhabi royal family, from which Manchester City's owner Sheikh Mansour 
hails, has also played its part. The ruling elite's Abu Dhabi Media Company has 
won the rights for Premier League matches across the Middle East and North 
Africa from the incumbent holder, Showtime Arabia.

Local sources say Showtime paid around $120m (GBP80m) last time and that ADMC 
entered the auction for 2010-13 at $150m, but ended up paying more than $300m 
(GBP200m-plus). If that is a stunning endorsement of growth in one region, then 
the auctions in Singapore and Hong Kong were downright jaw-dropping.

In Singapore, an island with a population of 4.8 million people, the rights are 
held by the pay-TV operator StarHub, which paid an estimated GBP67m for 
2007-10. 
Its fiercest commercial rival, SingTel, believes that Premier League content 
equals lucrative subscriptions so poured huge resources into the effort to take 
the rights from StarHub. It succeeded. Sources in Asia say SingTel paid GBP200m 
for 2010-13.

In Hong Kong (population 7 million), the Now TV station currently has the 
rights 
(having paid about GBP115m last time) but has lost them to i-Cable, which is 
understood to have paid close to GBP150m.

The Premier League will retain the same partners for 2010-13 in some regions: 
Fox and Setanta will continue to be the main carriers of the Premier League 
across North America and the Caribbean, as will Fox Latin in South America, and 
ESPN Star across 18 major Asia countries, including India.

Canal+ retains rights in France and Poland (in a deal worth about GBP60m), but 
a 
shake-up in Scandinavia has seen Canal+ lose the rights there to an 
intermediary 
sub-licensee, Medge Consulting. Medge has paid GBP111m for rights in Denmark, 
Finland, Norway and Sweden. Medge has sold or will sell the rights on to 
individual broadcasters at a healthy mark-up. An incidental quirk in the 
Scandinavian sale is the involvement on a consultancy basis in the sell-on of 
rights of Rune Hauge, the agent at the centre of the Arsenal "bung" scandal of 
the early 1990s. Almost 20 years on, Hauge is still making money from English 
football, strictly legally this time.

The League simply does not have the manpower to do individual deals itself in 
all 211 countries where its games are shown, so sub-licensing and the sales of 
packets of regional rights is common. The League has 98 broadcast partners, as 
well as its own new TV station, Premier League TV, which will provide "viewer 
ready" action, commentary and analysis for nations wanting to buy rights "off 
the shelf".

In the future, the League hopes PLTV can attract non-traditional buyers to the 
market, for example entrepreneurs who want to enter the football market but 
don't have broadcasting capabilities themselves.

The Premier League's live domestic rights for 2010-13 raised GBP1.782bn when 
sold last summer. With such enormous growth in international sales, and room 
for 
expansion, foreign rights should overtake home sales in the future.

The League has been careful to strike the right balance in its latest sale 
between maximising income while making matches available to audiences that are 
as large as possible. Pay-TV stations pay more because they can earn more by 
charging viewers, but free-to-air stations always deliver much higher ratings.

In China, the pay-TV firm WinTV will keep rights for 2010-13, having paid 
around 
$50m, the same as it did for 2007-10. Exchange rate movements mean that $50m 
was 
worth GBP25.6m in 2007, but GBP33.3m now.

As The Independent first reported two years ago, the last WinTV deal caused a 
furore among the Premier League's top clubs because WinTV alienated potential 
viewers with crass marketing and high prices, and got so few subscribers that 
viewing figures were negligible. Chelsea, Arsenal, Manchester United and 
Liverpool were unhappy at the lack of exposure in what is seen as a key market 
for their international brand growth.

The difference this time is that while WinTV has retained the rights for 
2010-13, the new deal in China will involve the screening of at least one 
free-to-air match per week from this summer.

 

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