After a long negotiation, Canal+ has acquired the remaining 55% of MultiChoice in a deal valued at $3 billion
The deal now gives Canal+ full control of Africa’s largest pay-TV operator, owners of DStv and GOtv
The mega deal has been approved by South Africa’s Competition Tribunal, with several public interest conditions attached.…CONTINUE READING
French media giant Canal+ has received final regulatory approval to acquire MultiChoice Group, the South African pay-TV operator behind DStv and GOtv. The deal is valued at 55 billion rand (about $3 billion), the companies announced on Wednesday, July 23.
The South African Competition Tribunal cleared the way for Canal+ to acquire the remaining 55% stake in MultiChoice, enabling the French company to proceed with the takeover by October 8, 2025.
Reuters reports that the deal is transformative for Canal+ as part of its expansion in Africa, particularly in English-speaking regions, while for MultiChoice, it will provide much-needed capital to support its local content and innovation.
Maxime Saada, CEO of CANAL+ said in a statement: “The combined group will benefit from enhanced scale, greater exposure to high-growth markets and the ability to deliver meaningful synergies.”
Canal+, which currently operates in 25 African countries through 16 subsidiaries and serves eight million subscribers, said the acquisition will accelerate its ambition to grow to 50–100 million subscribers over the next few years, from 27 million currently.
MultiChoice, Africa’s largest pay-TV operator with 14.5 million subscribers across 50 sub-Saharan countries, includes premium content brands like SuperSport and the DStv satellite service.
The merger will combine Canal+’s French-language content with MultiChoice’s English and Portuguese offerings, creating what Saada described as “a true champion for Africa.”
The mandatory share offer of 125 rand per share values MultiChoice at roughly $3 billion (2.6 billion euros). Canal+, recently spun off from Vivendi, first made the offer in 2023.
Details of the deal
The approval came with several public-interest conditions worth about 26 billion rand over three years and keeping MultiChoice’s headquarters in South Africa, Punch reports.
These include maintaining MultiChoice’s headquarters in South Africa and continued support for local content production. The companies said in a joint statement.
“The package will maintain funding for South African general entertainment and sports content, providing local content creators with a strong foundation for future success.”
Will canal+ still be showing EPL?