Australia's Fairfax Media, publisher of The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age, has agreed to a US$3 billion merger with Nine Entertainment Co. – a deal, if approved, that would create a multi-platform empire amid concerns over the country's rapidly consolidating media market.The cash-and-stock deal — with Nine's shareholders getting a 51.1 percent controlling interest and Fairfax giving up its storied name — would see the combination of "TV, print, radio, subscription video on demand, digital real-estate classifieds and a suite of digital publishing and events assets," according to The Australian Financial Review, itself a Fairfax-owned newspaper."This merger with Fairfax will add another dimension, creating a unique, all-platform, media business that will reach more than half of Australia each day through television, online, print and radio," Nine CEO Hugh Marks said, according to the Review.The deal must still meet with regulatory approval, but Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull, a former journalist and media lawyer, was quick to back the plan."I think bringing them together will strengthen both of them, I think it will strengthen both of them as television and online and print journalism," Turnbull told the Tasmania Talks podcast on Thursday, according to the Herald."It's a very tough competitive environment nowadays. The arrival of all of the online news services has made the media so much more competitive than it used to be."The merger would bring together Fairfax's strengths in print and radio with Nine's dominance in television and combine their forays into digital streaming. The two companies already co-own SteamCo, the parent of the Stan streaming service that competes locally with Netflix.According to Variety magazine:
Australia's Nine TV To Buy Publisher Fairfax For $3 Billion
