Archived article
Please note that tax, investment, pension and ISA rules can change and the information and any views contained in this article may now be inaccurate.
BT breaks the billion barrier with football deal

A belief in the analyst community that inflation in the cost of sporting rights might be abating looks forlorn.
Telecoms giant BT (BT.A) is paying 32% more than its previous three-year contract for exclusive rights to broadcast Champions League football from 2018 to 2021.
The £1.2bn total amount is three times the value of the joint deal agreed by Sky (SKY) and ITV (ITV) before BT entered the market two years ago.
The spiralling cost of sporting rights is unhelpful at a time when BT is battling an accounting scandal in its Italian operations and straining under the weight of a £14.2bn pension deficit.
A key question for investors is whether the company can sustain the 10% dividend growth promised for this year and next year.
Investment bank Jefferies says: ‘The speed with which (the new) auction result has followed the start-of-March deadline for tender submissions would suggest that BT faced limited opposition from Sky (or anyone else), and that bidding did not go to multiple rounds.
‘BT shareholders might, therefore, question how necessary it was for their company to meet UEFA’s price expectations in full. Moreover, we wonder what this implies for BT’s negotiating leverage in future UEFA rights auctions.’
Elsewhere key rival Sky’s £18.5bn takeover by Rupert Murdoch’s 21st Century Fox looks set to be tied up by regulatory scrutiny as UK culture secretary Karen Bradley says she is ‘minded’ to refer the deal to regulator Ofcom on public interest. (TS)
Important information:
These articles are provided by Shares magazine which is published by AJ Bell Media, a part of AJ Bell. Shares is not written by AJ Bell.
Shares is provided for your general information and use and is not a personal recommendation to invest. It is not intended to be relied upon by you in making or not making any investment decisions. The investments referred to in these articles will not be suitable for all investors. If in doubt please seek appropriate independent financial advice.
Investors acting on the information in these articles do so at their own risk and AJ Bell Media and its staff do not accept liability for losses suffered by investors as a result of their investment decisions.
Issue contents
Big News
- Gear4music is hitting the high notes
- Mitie’s destruction of value
- Gold miner shock as government bans exports
- Just Eat wins back market favour
- Standard Life and Aberdeen still in play
- Large risks hang over Aggreko’s earnings
- BT breaks the billion barrier with football deal
- Who’s next as Shawbrook battles takeover approach?
Editor's View
Great Ideas Update
Investment Trusts
Larger Companies
Main Feature
Smaller Companies
Story In Numbers
- UK-Listed Asset Managers 2017
- Major Stock Market Indices 2017
- £57.7m: Centamin chairman’s non-stop share sale
- €10m: Punishing fine for data breaches
- 51%: Amount of new build homes with ‘major faults’
- £3.24: Average weekly spend on Football Pools
- Five-month low: UK business activity
- 6.5%: China scales back growth expectations