Time Warner in talks to acquire stake in Vice Media

Vice co-founder Shane Smith says media company may pursue an initial public offering

Vice Media co-founder and CEO Shane Smith at the Web Summit in  Dublin last October. Time Warner is reportedly in talks to acquire a stake in Vice. Photo: Dara Mac Dónaill/The Irish Times
Vice Media co-founder and CEO Shane Smith at the Web Summit in Dublin last October. Time Warner is reportedly in talks to acquire a stake in Vice. Photo: Dara Mac Dónaill/The Irish Times

Time Warner is reportedly in talks to acquire a stake in Vice Media, the company that combines punk culture with online journalism.

The discussions are said to value Vice Media at $2 billion to almost $3 billion.

Vice Media has a show on HBO, one of Time Warner's cable-television channels.

Alex Detrick, a spokesman for Vice Media, declined to comment, as did Keith Cocozza, a spokesman for Time Warner. Both companies are based in New York.

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A deal would give Time Warner’s TV network a property that has successfully developed content for new formats such as the web, as well as traditional TV.

Vice Media, known for its savvy packaging of youth culture, attracts a younger male audience coveted by advertisers from YouTube to HBO, where its correspondents report from areas of conflict around the globe.

The company, backed by billionaire Rupert Murdoch, has said that it's poised to double revenue to $1 billion by 2016.

Co-founder Shane Smith also said in a March interview with Bloomberg TV that Vice Media may pursue an initial public offering.

Murdoch’s 21st Century Fox acquired about a 5 per cent stake in Vice Media last year, according to Smith. The price was $70 million, Fox said in a regulatory filing, suggesting a valuation of $1.4 billion.

The talks were first reported by Sky News, which said that one potential deal structure involved Time Warner injecting its HLN news channel into Vice Media in return for about half of the enlarged company.

Time Warner, which just spun off its magazine unit Time, also owns the CNN cable news channel and the Warner Bros film studio.

Bloomberg