Will DISH Network Corp. (DISH) Be Swallowed Whole by DIRECTV (DTV)?

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Satellite-television giant DIRECTV (NASDAQ:DTV) has employed Latin America as its growth driver over the past couple of years, and it’s been a wonderful partnership. The company has gained millions of subscribers in the region while its North American business faces the same challenges felt by competitor DISH Network Corp. (NASDAQ:DISH) and other service providers. Recently, DIRECTV courted Vivendi-owned GTV, a Brazilian broadband player with 10% of the market share. However, the deal recently crumbled over disagreement on price. This left some analysts thinking now may be an appropriate time for DIRECTV (NASDAQ:DTV) and DISH Network Corp. (NASDAQ:DISH) to join forces. What would that look like?

DISH Network Corp. NASDAQ:DISH

A history of not merging
The DIRECTV-DISH merger is not a new concept at all. The two companies actually tried to do it back in 2002, but regulators determined it was not in the best interest of free markets. This wouldn’t be the same situation today, though, given the formidable competition from streaming services such as Netflix, Inc. (NASDAQ:NFLX) and Amazon.com, Inc. (NASDAQ:AMZN), in addition to traditional cable companies.

But why would the two companies want to merge? DIRECTV (NASDAQ:DTV) CEO Mike White said the two companies do, in fact, have strong potential synergies.

Two different strategies, same goal
Both DISH and DIRECTV have taken significant, though very different, strides to navigate the changing tides of content distribution. DIRECTV has taken what I consider to be a more traditional, risk-averse strategy of expanding into emerging markets — mainly Latin America. This has, as I mentioned, led to explosive subscriber growth quarter after quarter, even if ARPUs have suffered because of low price points and exchange rates. DIRECTV’s shares are currently trading at an all-time high.

DISH, on the other hand, took the risky road, and it has yet to pay off. The company has been aggressively attempting to build out its own broadband network, with some degree of success. But what it really needs is a partner. The company recently made an offer for Clearwire Corporation (NASDAQ:CLWR) that came in at a premium to Sprint Nextel Corporation (NYSE:S)‘s offer, but most believe Clearwire will ultimately go to the latter. This leaves DISH Network Corp. (NASDAQ:DISH) in a tricky position — it has billions invested in valuable spectrum, years of regulatory shuffling and positioning, and meanwhile, lackluster subscriber numbers in its U.S. market. If DISH is eventually able to launch its wireless network and compete head-on with telecoms, it would be a major value driver going forward, but this leaves little to be excited about in the short term.

So by merging with DIRECTV (NASDAQ:DTV), DISH Network Corp. (NASDAQ:DISH) would solve its core business stagnation. The resulting company would easily be the satellite-television overlord of the Americas, with plenty of cash flow from both its higher ARPU North American subscribers, and its rapidly increasing Latin American operations.

DIRECTV, on the other hand, would get the spectrum and broadband play, possibly even more valuable than its proposed acquisition of GTV.

Many, including Investment bank Macquarie, think this merger makes more sense now than ever and could be right around the corner.

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