DirecTV is abandoning its acquisition of Dish (NASDAQ:SATS) assets after a group of bondholders refused to accept the terms of a proposed debt offer, a DirecTV spokesperson said.
“A successful exchange was a condition for acquiring the Dish video business,” the spokesperson said in an email Tuesday. “Given the outcome of the EchoStar exchange, DirecTV will have no choice but to terminate the acquisition of Dish by midnight on Nov. 22.”
DirecTV does not plan to offer further concessions, according to people familiar with the matter who requested anonymity to discuss confidential information. Further progress could be made if Dish and co-founder and Chairman Charlie Ergen were to come to the negotiating table, though that currently seems unlikely, said one of the people.
DirecTV, which will soon be wholly owned by private equity firm TPG, would have assumed roughly $10 billion worth of Dish debt and paid a nominal $1 to acquire Dish DBS, which includes both Dish and Sling TV. But the initial deal was quickly contested by a group of bondholders.
DirecTV made a revised offer that valued Dish bonds at a little more than 70 cents on the dollar.
Dish’s parent EchoStar Corp. dipped 60 cents in price, or 2.6%, to $22.16.