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Charter and Cox’s big cable-TV merger will ramp up the Spectrum brand in the cord-cutting era   

On Friday, cable companies Charter Communications and Cox Communications announced that they’ve agreed to merge. Charter will acquire Cox in a deal valued at $34.5 billion. 

This is one of the biggest deals of the year. Charter, known more widely by its brand Spectrum, is one of the largest television communications operators in the country. 

The proposed transaction will result in Charter acquiring Cox’s commercial fiber and managed IT and cloud businesses, and Cox will contribute its residential cable business to Charter. 

The joint press release noted that the merger will “create an industry leader in mobile and broadband communications services, seamless video entertainment, and high-quality customer service delivering powerful benefits for American employees, customers, communities, and shareholders.” 

Charter CEO Chris Winfrey said, “This combination will augment our ability to innovate and provide high-quality, competitively priced products, delivered with outstanding customer service, to millions of homes and businesses.” 

Cox will own around 23% of the combined entity’s fully diluted shares, the companies said. As part of the deal, the combined entity will assume Cox’s estimated $12 billion in outstanding debt.

Charter (NYSE: CHTR) stock was up around 2.58% in early trading on Friday. Cox is a privately held company. 

Here’s what to expect from the merger

The deal is expected to close at the same time as the previously announced Liberty Broadband merger. The combined company will change its name to Cox Communications within a year of the deal closing.

Spectrum will become the consumer-facing brand. 

Winfrey will continue to serve as CEO. The combined company will remain headquartered in Stamford, Connecticut, and plans to maintain a significant presence at Cox’s campus in Atlanta, Georgia.

Cable companies struggle to retain pay-TV subscribers

Why is this strategic merger being announced? Cable companies have experienced dwindling pay-TV subscriber rates as customers “cut the cord” by canceling cable subscriptions and switching to streaming services. As a result, the industry has invested heavily in broadband and mobile.

According to the latest “cord-cutting monitor” report from analyst firm MoffettNathanson, Charter has continued to lose pay-TV customers along with the rest of the industry. In Q4 of 2024, the cable giant lost 123,000 cable subscribers.

Collectively, the cable industry is expected to continue to shed pay-TV subscribers in the coming years, declining from 67.7 million subscribers at the end of last year to 51.5 million by 2028, according to MoffettNathanson’s projections. The firm says the growth of streaming services that replicate the cable bundle won’t be enough to offset the downward trend.

Charter will acquire Cox’s existing 6 million subscribers if the deal closes as planned. The planned merger awaits approval from Charter shareholders and regulators. 

The proposed deal will further test regulators’ appetite for large mergers in the Trump era. A decade ago, Comcast and Time Warner Cable (TWC) abandoned their proposed $45.2 billion combination amid concerns from the Department of Justice (DOJ) and the Federal Communications Commission (FCC).