Matsushita Completes $6.13-Billion Tender for MCA - Los Angeles Times
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Matsushita Completes $6.13-Billion Tender for MCA

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<i> From Reuters</i>

Matsushita Electric Industrial Co. announced over the weekend that it had completed its $6.13-billion tender offer for MCA Inc.--the largest takeover ever of an American company by a Japanese.

Matsushita said in a statement that 77.7 million shares of Universal City-based MCA had been tendered as of its 12:01 a.m. Saturday deadline. That represented 97% of shares outstanding, the announcement said.

Matsushita said shareholders who tendered will be paid Wednesday.

It said it expects to complete its merger of MCA into a wholly owned subsidiary within two weeks.

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Completion of the merger followed two failed 11th-hour attempts Friday to block the deal in the courts.

Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia denied a request by Go-Video Inc. to stop the takeover. The manufacturer of videocassette recorders had contended that the deal would violate antitrust laws.

In Los Angeles, a federal district judge rejected the motion of a shareholder who had alleged that MCA Chairman Lew R. Wasserman was given preferential treatment in the deal.

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The plaintiff contended that shareholders were not offered the chance to swap their shares for Matsushita stock, as Wasserman was. The deal allows him to avoid paying about $109 million in capital gains tax.

Other shareholders will receive $66 per share in the tender offer. Stockholders also will receive shares in MCA’s television station, WWOR-TV in Secaucus, N.J., which analysts value at $5 a share.

MCA stock closed Friday at $69.125, up 62.5 cents, in heavy New York Stock Exchange trading.

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MCA, founded in 1924, is the nation’s fourth-largest entertainment company. It owns Universal Pictures, theme parks, record labels and other interests. Its most famous movies are “E.T.--The Extra-Terrestrial,” “Back to the Future” and “Jaws.”

Universal Pictures becomes the third major Hollywood studio to go to a foreign buyer.

Matsushita rival Sony Corp. last year bought Columbia Pictures for $3.4 billion, and Italy’s Pathe Corp. this year bought MGM/UA Entertainment Co. for $1.36 billion.

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