Deal is dead... ?

This is what my contacts have been telling me all along. Haven't found a reason to doubt them yet.
Again, if true, a astounding bad decision on TPG part, that is why it is so hard to believe.

TPG Capital trades on the NASDAQ, they have shareholders (investors) plus a Board of Directors to answer to, if they really lost $2.5B to a company that was close to Bankruptcy, there will be firings, massive firings.

TPG Capital has a market cap of $24.05 Billion, so losing $2 Billion is a big deal for a equity fund of that size.
Business as usual and now DISH sits in a very good place.
Again, until Echostar can prove they can monetize the spectrum, they are not in a good place, losing 3 Million out of 10M Cell Phone Subscribers in just 4 Years, after multiple marketing attempts, is not a good sign.

Along with the decreasing revenue from their TV Service and Satellite Internet.

They have massive hurdles.

But it is worse for DirecTV, based on the math.
 
How can Dish buy DirecTV when they are going bankrupt?
Based on when debt is due for Echostar, they will hold on a lot longer then DirecTV.

Based on the subscribers numbers published at Fitch Ratings, they (DirecTV) have been losing 2 Million a year the last 3 years, if that number stays the same, will have 9 Million the end of 2024 (which could be worse due to the DirecTV/Disney dispute).

So, by the end of 2026, DirecTV will have 5 Million Subs and be unprofitable at that point.

The new revaluation of DirecTV will be so low at that point, Dish should be able to pick it off of a extremely low fee.

If you disagree, give me one example that shows DirecTV is planning on staying on for the long term, new equipment, nope, new satellites nope, new ventures into other businesses, nope.
 
This is what my contacts have been telling me all along. Haven't found a reason to doubt them yet.

Business as usual and now DISH sits in a very good place.
I have to ask...does this really seems feasible that TPG would just piss away more than $2 billion dollars? All of the articles available state that DISH received "financing" agreements in September. Financing is not free in the financial world. Financing is a loan.

From the Washington Post today:

Now, DirecTV is walking away from the plan. “A successful [debt] exchange was a condition for acquiring the Dish video business,” a DirecTV spokesperson said Wednesday in an email sent to The Washington Post and other news organizations. “Given the outcome of the EchoStar exchange, DirecTV will have no choice but to terminate the acquisition of Dish by midnight Nov. 22.”
The debt exchange was not successful...at least so far.

Also from that same article:
In a note Wednesday, Craig Moffett, an analyst for MoffettNathanson, said EchoStar is “all but insolvent” after the bondholders’ rejection of the debt terms. The simplest path to get the deal back on track, Moffett wrote, would be for TPG Capital, the private equity firm that would own the merged DirecTV/Dish Network, to “sweeten the deal” for bondholders, but that seems unlikely since the companies have already attempted to boost the value of the proposed swap.
 
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I have to ask...does this really seems feasible that TPG would just piss away more than $2 billion dollars? All of the articles available state that DISH received "financing" agreements in September. Financing is not free in the financial world. Financing is a loan.

From the Washington Post today:


The debt exchange was not successful...at least so far.

Also from that same article:
By Nov. 22, should have more answers.

And I am agreement with you, makes no sense they would just give away $2 Billion, TPG is a big equity firm, but not that big.

As far as Echostar being insolvent as reported by Moffett, I have read Echostar received $5B in new funding, I have no idea if that was related to the merger, but that and the $2B takes care of the debt for 2024 and 2025.

But they will still need more cash to continue the build out and the expansion plans they laid out to the FCC, as conditions for changing the deadline, but since they are losing money every quarter, maybe that is what he is referring to.
 
As far as Echostar being insolvent as reported by Moffett, I have read Echostar received $5B in new funding, I have no idea if that was related to the merger, but that and the $2B takes care of the debt for 2024 and 2025.
Yes but that new funding is just adding more debt. Kicking the can down the road. They are in this predicament because of debt. Their solution seems to be "lets add some more debt".
 
Yes but that new funding is just adding more debt. Kicking the can down the road. They are in this predicament because of debt. Their solution seems to be "lets add some more debt".
It will bit them in the end if they cannot turn things around, but still safe for a couple of years.
 
The TPG deal is no different than many other proposed acquisitions that (might) fail to complete for various reasons.

You can go back and watch deal after failed deal where millions to billions are put up as a commitment to buy with a provision the money is lost if the deal does not go through .

EchoStar did well , reduced their near term (through 2025) debt payments to 139 million, got a bunch of cash by rolling their bonds by adding their previously unpledged AWS-3 and AWS-4 spectrum assets to the secured bonds being rolled over.

The problem they will now face is they have basically pledged all their valuable assets for the secured loans.

So, the next time they run out of cash (no matter if the DIRECTV deal goes through or not), the bondholders will have to decide whether to extend terms or fight for many years over who gets the table scraps.
 
By Nov. 22, should have more answers.

And I am agreement with you, makes no sense they would just give away $2 Billion, TPG is a big equity firm, but not that big.

As far as Echostar being insolvent as reported by Moffett, I have read Echostar received $5B in new funding, I have no idea if that was related to the merger, but that and the $2B takes care of the debt for 2024 and 2025.

But they will still need more cash to continue the build out and the expansion plans they laid out to the FCC, as conditions for changing the deadline, but since they are losing money every quarter, maybe that is what he is referring to.
I thought I read that $5 billion was based on their own bandwidth they own. They used it as collateral to secure additional financing. Even though I don't think they can even touch it to sell if they wanted to till 2026.
 
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Direct tv scrapping Dish merger