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Investors Cheer Cablevision's Sale of Voom Satellite TV Venture; Shares Jump 11 Percent
NEW YORK Jan 21, 2005 — Investors applauded Cablevision System Corp.'s decision to jettison its money-losing venture into the satellite TV business, which marked a defeat for Cablevision's chairman Charles Dolan, a media industry pioneer who built Cablevision into the nation's sixth-largest cable company.
Cablevision shares jumped $3.27, or 13 percent, to $28.75 in heavy trading Friday afternoon on the New York Stock Exchange, after the Bethpage, N.Y.-based company announced late Thursday that it was selling its broadcast satellite and several related assets to EchoStar Communications Corp., owner of the DISH satellite network, for $200 million in cash.
Thomas Eagan, an analyst with the Oppenheimer & Co. brokerage, told investors in a note Friday that the sale was a "positive event" for Cablevision because "it ends a costly and ultimately misguided venture into the satellite broadcasting business."
Mario Gabelli, a media investor whose funds are the largest shareholder in Cablevision outside the Dolan family, also said the sale was positive for the company, but not because Voom was necessarily a poor business idea.
"From my point of view, high definition is coming," Gabelli said. "I think Dolan had a vision, and you needed to finance it, (but) my clients are not in the venture capital business."
Investors Cheer Cablevision's Sale of Voom Satellite TV Venture; Shares Jump 11 Percent
NEW YORK Jan 21, 2005 — Investors applauded Cablevision System Corp.'s decision to jettison its money-losing venture into the satellite TV business, which marked a defeat for Cablevision's chairman Charles Dolan, a media industry pioneer who built Cablevision into the nation's sixth-largest cable company.
Cablevision shares jumped $3.27, or 13 percent, to $28.75 in heavy trading Friday afternoon on the New York Stock Exchange, after the Bethpage, N.Y.-based company announced late Thursday that it was selling its broadcast satellite and several related assets to EchoStar Communications Corp., owner of the DISH satellite network, for $200 million in cash.
Thomas Eagan, an analyst with the Oppenheimer & Co. brokerage, told investors in a note Friday that the sale was a "positive event" for Cablevision because "it ends a costly and ultimately misguided venture into the satellite broadcasting business."
Mario Gabelli, a media investor whose funds are the largest shareholder in Cablevision outside the Dolan family, also said the sale was positive for the company, but not because Voom was necessarily a poor business idea.
"From my point of view, high definition is coming," Gabelli said. "I think Dolan had a vision, and you needed to finance it, (but) my clients are not in the venture capital business."