US group pulls out of deal to buy Daily Telegraph - Capital Business
Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

World

US group pulls out of deal to buy Daily Telegraph

NOV 14 – US investment group RedBird Capital has pulled out of a deal to buy the Daily and Sunday Telegraph for £500m.

RedBird had a previous attempt to buy the Telegraph rebuffed by politicians as it was majority-funded by Abu Dhabi’s IMI group – which is owned in turn by the Abu Dhabi royal family.

A law change meant that foreign sovereign wealth funds could take a maximum stake of 15% in newspapers or periodicals.

The new bid complied with that rule, but it is understood that the government intended to submit the deal to regulatory review.

A spokesman for the group said: “RedBird has today withdrawn its bid for the Telegraph Media Group.

“We remain fully confident that the Telegraph and its world-class team have a bright future ahead of them and we will work hard to help secure a solution which is in the best interests of employees and readers.”

Sources close to Redbird insisted that they were confident that the bid would have passed a government review process, but cited negative articles toward the bid from the current Telegraph newsroom as a factor in shelving their interest.

RedBird itself has faced questions over the extent of investment it has received from China and Gulf based investors.

An IMI Group spokesperson said its “priority has been to end the uncertainty and secure the Telegraph’s long-term success” and that it remained in contact with “interested parties” on a deal.

It said it remained committed to completing a sale, while co-operating with the government and regulators.

RedBird founder Gerry Cardinale had planned to expand the Telegraph’s reach and subscriber base in the US, believing there to be a gap in the market.

Among other investments, RedBird Capital owns the Italian football team AC Milan.

The Daily Telegraph has been in limbo for over two years, when the Redbird IMI consortium paid off the debts of the Telegraph’s previous owners, the Barclay family, hoping to take eventual ownership of the newspapers.

By BBC

Visited 36 times, 1 visit(s) today

More on Capital Business

Kenya

The agreement was announced during the first-ever IPDAYS Nairobi x Silicon Savannah Startup Fair 2026, which brought together startups, investors and policymakers from Tunisia,...

World

Work from home if possible, he urged. Avoid unnecessary foreign travel. Buy less gold. Consume less fuel.

World

Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi announced the new cooperation framework on Wednesday after an online meeting with other Asian leaders.

Companies

The collaboration is designed to open up international opportunities for players, coaches, officials and clubs, while strengthening the country’s sports ecosystem through skills transfer...

Agriculture

The discussions follow a recent visit by a technical delegation from Algeria that toured livestock production systems in Kenya to assess the country’s capacity...

World

US beverage and medical cannabis company Tilray has bought the company's UK brewing operations, brand and 11 pubs in a £33m deal.

World

Under the deal, Indonesia will cut trade barriers on more than 99% of US imports and facilitate more than $30bn (£22.3bn) of purchases of...

Kenya

In a statement, the Kenya Airports Authority said it signed a return-to-work formula with the Kenya Aviation Workers Union, ending the Air Traffic Control...