AFP23 July 2025 | 13:20

Canal+ clears final hurdle to acquire S.Africa's MultiChoice

The company said in a statement that the South African Competition Tribunal had given its approval for Canal+ to acquire the approximately 55% of MultiChoice shares it does not already own.

Canal+ clears final hurdle to acquire S.Africa's MultiChoice

The MultiChoice offices in Randburg, Johannesburg. Picture: multichoice.co.za

PARIS, FRANCE - France's Canal+ said Wednesday it had cleared the final regulatory hurdle for the buyout of Africa's largest pay TV enterprise MultiChoice and further expand its footprint on the continent.

The company said in a statement that the South African Competition Tribunal had given its approval for Canal+ to acquire the approximately 55% of MultiChoice shares it does not already own.

The approval "clears the way for us to conclude the transaction in line with our previously communicated timeline" by 8 October at the latest, Canal+ chief executive Maxime Saada said in a statement.

"I’m excited about the potential this transaction unlocks for all stakeholders... the combined Group will benefit from enhanced scale, greater exposure to high-growth markets and the ability to deliver meaningful synergies," he added.

Canal+ is present in 25 African countries through 16 subsidiaries and has eight million subscribers, according to the French group.

MultiChoice operates in 50 countries across sub-Saharan Africa and has 14.5 million subscribers, it says. It includes Africa's premier sports broadcaster, SuperSport, and the DStv satellite television service.

"It is a hugely positive step forward in our journey to bring together two iconic media and entertainment companies and create a true champion for Africa," Saada said about combining Canal+'s French language offerings with the English and Portuguese content on MultiChoice.

Canal+ hopes that the acquisition will allow it to grow to 50 to 100 million subscribers in a few years, from 27 million currently.

The mandatory share offer of R125  (6 euros) per share values MultiChoice values the company at $3.0 billion (2.6 billion euro).

The approval came with several public-interest conditions worth about R26 billion over three years and keeping MultiChoice's headquarters in South Africa.

Shares in Canal+ climbed 1.3% in trading in London, and are up 12.8% this year.