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U.S. Reps Raise Concerns That Disney, Fox, WBD Sports Streaming Venture Will Be Anticompetitive

2024-04-19 10:186210
U.S. Reps Raise Co<i></i>ncerns That Disney, Fox, WBD Sports Streaming Venture Will Be Anticompetitive

The Disney/ESPN, Fox Corp. and Warner Bros. Discovery sports-streaming joint venture has drawn congressional scrutiny.

In a letter sent Wednesday (April 16) to the CEOs of the three companies, Rep. Jerrold Nadler (D.-NY), the ranking member of the House Judiciary Committee, and Rep. Joaquin Castro (D.-Texas) requested answers about the competitive implications of the proposed sports streaming JV.

“As programmers, your companies exert tremendous influence over pricing across the live sports TV ecosystem,” Nadler and Castro wrote in the letter to Disney’s Bob Iger, Fox’s Lachlan Murdoch and Warner Bros. Discovery’s David Zaslav.

The three companies’ joint venture, the letter continued, “raises questions about how this new offering would affect access, competition and choice in the sports streaming market. Without more complete information about the pricing, intent, and organization of this new venture, we are concerned that this consolidation will result in higher prices for consumers and less fair licensing terms for upstream sports leagues and downstream video distributors.”

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The reps requested answers by April 30. Among their list of 19 questions: “Will the Joint Venture Partners implement provisions to prevent anticompetitive sharing of pricing or other competitively sensitive information among each other?”

A Fox Corp. spokesman declined to comment. Reps for Disney and WBD did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Disney, Fox and WBD unveiled their partnership in February and said they expected to debut their sports-streaming bundle in the fall of 2024. The joint venture will pool ESPN+ and the companies’ linear TV networks that carry sports programming (ABC, ESPN, ESPN2, ESPNU, SECN, ACCN, ESPNews, Fox, FS1, FS2, Big Ten Network, TNT, TBS and truTV). Pricing hasn’t been announced. Some have dubbed the JV “Spulu,” a portmanteau of “sports” and “Hulu” (which originally was a joint venture among broadcasters). Notably, the JV excludes NBCUniversal and Paramount Global/CBS.

The Justice Department reportedly has been planning to review the Disney-Fox-WBD venture over possible consumer harms, per Bloomberg. In addition, internet pay-TV provider Fubo filed a federal lawsuit seeking to block the JV service’s launch,alleging the venture violates antitrust laws.

Earlier this month Disney CEO Bob Iger said the JV is proceeding on the belief that it will clear regulatory scrutiny. “We think it’s actually a sports fan’s delight in terms of being able to watch all those sports in one place. Very pro-consumer,” Iger said in an appearance on CNBC.

Disney, Fox and WBD have announcedformer Apple TV+ exec Peter Distad as the JV’s CEO.Earlier, Fox Corp.CEO Lachlan Murdoch said the company expects the sports streaming venture toreach 5 million subscribers after five years, making the point that Fox Corp. expects the sports streaming venture to be incremental to its existing pay-TV revenue base.

These are the questions Nadler and Castro requested answers to from the CEOs, which requested that they also copy their responses to the Justice Department:

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