Tag Archives: West Australian Newspapers

Pacific Equity Partner Acquires Hoyts Cinemas

Australian exhibitor Hoyts has been sold to Pacific Equity Partner in a defeat to India’s Pyramid Saimira Theatre, which had pursued the deal aggressively. James Packer’s Publishing & Broadcasting Ltd. and West Australian Newspapers Holdings Ltd. are reported to have sold Hoyts Australian and New Zealand cinemas and stake in cinema advertiser Val Morgan in a deal valued at A$440m ($382m). The article by Bloomberg says that Packer is looking to sell media assets to invest more in gaming:

Pacific Equity plans to invest in Hoyts’s 40 Australian and nine New Zealand cinemas to reverse declining attendances. Third-quarter pretax profit at Hoyts fell 9 percent to A$8.5 million as a dearth of blockbuster movies hurt ticket sales.

“We believe there are opportunities for growth through further investment in digital entertainment and digital advertising media technologies,” Simon Pillar, Pacific Equity’s managing director, said in an e-mailed statement.

Publishing & Broadcasting and West Australian will each get A$150 million from the deal. The companies combined in January 2005 to acquire Hoyts from Packer’s private company, Consolidated Press Holdings Ltd., for A$347 million.

The deal is a blow to the international expansion plans of Pyramid Saimira Theatres, who were reported to have offered A$450m for Hoyts, i.e. A$10m more than Pacific, but for whatever reason they lost out.

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Sale of Australian Hoyts Said To Be Close

HoytsThe sale of Hoyts, one of Australia’s Big Three exhibitors, is said to be imminent. Partly owned by James (Son of Kerry) Packer’s Publishing and Broadcasting and West Australian Newspapers, which bought Hoyts for $347m just two years ago. The asking price is said to be north of $400, but this article from Herald Sun puts its finger adroitly on the problem with this or any other cinema business:

“There is not a lot you can do with it with your other businesses,” said Deutsche Bank media analyst Andrew Anagnostellis.

“The problem with that business is that you are really dependent on the product that comes out of Hollywood. So if there are big blockbusters coming through you do well, if not you don’t do well and the reality is it is not under your control.

“You’ve got essentially a fixed cost business with big variations in output.”

The potential buyers are said to include Reading Entertainment, Prime Television, Pacific Equity Partners and Catalyst Investment Managers, as well as Indian cinema operator Pyramid Saimira Theatre (see below). The deadline for bids are set to be this Friday, so don’t delay if you fancy you own cinema chain Down Under.

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