Saudi Prince purchases 5.5 percent of the Fox corporation

Steeplerot

Lifer
Mar 29, 2004
13,051
6
81
Saudis Buying Shares of Fox

Saudi prince Al-Waleed bin Talal, who offered Rudy Giuliani $10 million after the 9/11 attacks but tried to tie it to an anti-American statement, has bought a large piece of Fox News.

Saudi Prince Al-Waleed bin Talal has purchased 5.46 percent of the Fox corporation, according to Gulf Daily News, raising concern that the conservative Fox News may soften its anti-terror stance due to the views of the new shareholder.

Al-Waleed, the nephew of the late Saudi King Fahd, was in the news when he visited the World Trade centre?s remains just after the September 11th attacks and offered then-New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani a $10 million check for relief efforts. Al-Waleed then released a statement blaming US foreign policy and support for Israel for the attacks.

Giuliani returned the prince?s check with a statement that, ?There is no moral equivalent for this attack. The people who did it lost any right to ask for justification when they slaughtered ... innocent people ... Not only are those statements wrong, they?re part of the problem.?


http://www.adnki.com/index_2Level.php?cat=Business&loid=8.0.205047586&par=0

Quote:


MEDIA: SAUDI PRINCE COMES TO MURDOCH'S AID



Riyadh, 7 Sept. (AKI) - Saudi Arabia's Prince al-Waleed ibnTalal announced Tuesday he has shifted his 5.46 percent stake in Rupert Murdoch's News Corp broadcasting and publishing empire, from non-voting to voting stock in a move that protects the Australian-born media tycoon against a possible raid by American John Malone, who owns Liberty Media and holds 18 percent of voting stock in News Corp. The announcement, which saw shares rise around one percent, reinforces the solid business ties between the Saudi prince and the media tycoon.
"Last November I said that I had the utmost confidence in Mr. Murdoch and his succession planning, and that if neccessary the Kingdom companies would replace their non-voting shares with voting shares and potentially purchase additional shares in support of Mr. Murdoch and his plans" al-Waleed said in a statement.

News Corp in August extended until 2007 its 'poison pill' plan to prevent Malone's Liberty media from increasing its stock, a move which some media reports say threatens Murdoch's plans for eventual succession.

According to Forbes Magazine the Saudi prince was in 2004 the fifth richest person on earth, with a fortune worth 21.5 billion dollars. In the past the prince has invested in various sectors including hotels, banking, telecommunications, media, technology, entertainment, construction, and real estate.

Prince al-Waleed, a member of the Saudi Royal Family, was born in Riyadh in 1955 and is the nephew of late King Fahd.

After attending university in the US - at Menlo college and Syracuse University - al- Waleed created a personal empire, which he manages through his two 'Kingdom' companies.

He is the biggest shareholder in the global financial services company Citigroup and holds stakes in the telecom supplier Motorola, the computer company Hewlett Packard, London's business area Canary Wharf, prestigious New York department store Saks Inc., and Kingdom centre - the tallest building in the Middle East.

Al-Waleed holds significant stakes in entertainment giants Time Warner and Walt Disney and is a leading hotellier, with significant investments in Four Seasons Hotels Resorts, the George V Hotel in Paris, Fairmont Hotels and Resorts and Movenpick Hotels and Resorts.

As well as being a businessman he is also a political activist who has called for a range of reforms in the Saudi Kingdom, including greater rights for women and democratic elections. He recently courted controversy when he took on Saudi Arabia's first ever female pilot, Hanadi Zakaria, to help fly his company's fleet of private jets.

In 2003 Prince Al-Waleed bin Talal funded the construction in Saudi Arabia of 1,000 homes during as a part of his humanitarian project to provide housing for the poor. More recently he financed the Islamic Art wing at Paris' Louvre Museum.






It's not like it wasen't propaganda from oil interests who own this country's policy already...

Now it's official...fox news...fairly and balanced pimping the american people

out for saudi family profit and the oil/big corporate ceos.

I thought they would always be a bit more...discreet about the agenda...
 

chambersc

Diamond Member
Feb 11, 2005
6,247
0
0
who would have the ability to say "no" ? is it possible to turn down the money in a publicly traded company?
 

Pabster

Lifer
Apr 15, 2001
16,986
1
0
ROFLMAO. You call less than 6% of a company "a large share"?

PS in case you've been living under a rock the foreigners are heavily invested in ALL the media.
 

Dissipate

Diamond Member
Jan 17, 2004
6,815
0
0
I can't stand cable news channels. Anyone who watches those channels on a regular basis is brainwashed anyways.

My only connection to the MSM is an occasional and brief read of the newspaper. But even then I am disgusted.
 

conjur

No Lifer
Jun 7, 2001
58,686
3
0
That happened like a couple of weeks ago. Thought it had been posted...guess not.

Yeah...hardly surprising, eh? Ted should have never given up CNN. Now CNN has hired a a buddy of DeLay as a top lobbyist.
 

Strk

Lifer
Nov 23, 2003
10,197
4
76
Fox News sucks, who cares?

And Sauds investing in things isn't really a big deal. I believe one of the Princes is the largest shareholder in Citigroup.
 

Steeplerot

Lifer
Mar 29, 2004
13,051
6
81
Originally posted by: chambersc
who would have the ability to say "no" ? is it possible to turn down the money in a publicly traded company?



To the saudi prince? Probaly the biggest input into american culture..our media..which already is pretty corrupt and monopolistic with our own corporations here..

It speaks volumes of their agenda...and is shameful on many levels being a media outlet so big.
 

conjur

No Lifer
Jun 7, 2001
58,686
3
0
Originally posted by: Strk
Fox News sucks, who cares?

And Sauds investing in things isn't really a big deal. I believe one of the Princes is the largest shareholder in Citigroup.
That makes sense. Wolfowitz formerly worked at Citigroup and he was close with Aziz, who is now the Pakistani PM.


Hmmm....
 

Strk

Lifer
Nov 23, 2003
10,197
4
76
Yeah, and if I read the whole article before, I would have noticed that it mentioned that. ;)
 

dmcowen674

No Lifer
Oct 13, 1999
54,889
47
91
www.alienbabeltech.com
Originally posted by: Steeplerot
Topic Title: Saudi Prince purchases 5.5 percent of the Fox corporation
Topic Summary: Something is awful slippery nowdays...

It's not like it wasen't propaganda from oil interests who own this country's policy already...

Now it's official...fox news...fairly and balanced pimping the american people

out for saudi family profit and the oil/big corporate ceos.

I thought they would always be a bit more...discreet about the agenda...

Yep, the U.S. is just like the Dis-Information Minister we ousted in Iraq and we have our own now.
 

dirtboy

Diamond Member
Oct 9, 1999
6,745
1
81
Originally posted by: chambersc
who would have the ability to say "no" ? is it possible to turn down the money in a publicly traded company?

True enough.

Then again the left or "independent" as they like to claim are so desperate that they'll grasp at any straw they can.
 

imported_Tango

Golden Member
Mar 8, 2005
1,623
0
0
Originally posted by: Pabster
ROFLMAO. You call less than 6% of a company "a large share"?

PS in case you've been living under a rock the foreigners are heavily invested in ALL the media.


6% in a single operation is a HUGE share...
 

NJDevil

Senior member
Jun 10, 2002
952
0
0
Originally posted by: Pabster
ROFLMAO. You call less than 6% of a company "a large share"?

PS in case you've been living under a rock the foreigners are heavily invested in ALL the media.

Once you own 6% of a company, you can start a takeover bid ...

I believe that actual percentage is 5%, but I could be wrong.

You're pretty oblivious to market share of large companies if you don't think 6% by a single entity is a large share.
 

Pabster

Lifer
Apr 15, 2001
16,986
1
0
I doubt it. Al-Jazeera is still going fine. (And I'm speaking of their US-based offices and facilities.)
 

realsup

Senior member
Oct 10, 2004
357
0
0
Muslims should not own a News Channel. Oh wait that is what the Aryan nation would say not the great open minded liberals.
 

imported_Condor

Diamond Member
Sep 22, 2004
5,425
0
0
Originally posted by: Steeplerot
Saudis Buying Shares of Fox

Saudi prince Al-Waleed bin Talal, who offered Rudy Giuliani $10 million after the 9/11 attacks but tried to tie it to an anti-American statement, has bought a large piece of Fox News.

Saudi Prince Al-Waleed bin Talal has purchased 5.46 percent of the Fox corporation, according to Gulf Daily News, raising concern that the conservative Fox News may soften its anti-terror stance due to the views of the new shareholder.

Al-Waleed, the nephew of the late Saudi King Fahd, was in the news when he visited the World Trade centre?s remains just after the September 11th attacks and offered then-New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani a $10 million check for relief efforts. Al-Waleed then released a statement blaming US foreign policy and support for Israel for the attacks.

Giuliani returned the prince?s check with a statement that, ?There is no moral equivalent for this attack. The people who did it lost any right to ask for justification when they slaughtered ... innocent people ... Not only are those statements wrong, they?re part of the problem.?


http://www.adnki.com/index_2Level.php?cat=Business&loid=8.0.205047586&par=0

Quote:


MEDIA: SAUDI PRINCE COMES TO MURDOCH'S AID



Riyadh, 7 Sept. (AKI) - Saudi Arabia's Prince al-Waleed ibnTalal announced Tuesday he has shifted his 5.46 percent stake in Rupert Murdoch's News Corp broadcasting and publishing empire, from non-voting to voting stock in a move that protects the Australian-born media tycoon against a possible raid by American John Malone, who owns Liberty Media and holds 18 percent of voting stock in News Corp. The announcement, which saw shares rise around one percent, reinforces the solid business ties between the Saudi prince and the media tycoon.
"Last November I said that I had the utmost confidence in Mr. Murdoch and his succession planning, and that if neccessary the Kingdom companies would replace their non-voting shares with voting shares and potentially purchase additional shares in support of Mr. Murdoch and his plans" al-Waleed said in a statement.

News Corp in August extended until 2007 its 'poison pill' plan to prevent Malone's Liberty media from increasing its stock, a move which some media reports say threatens Murdoch's plans for eventual succession.

According to Forbes Magazine the Saudi prince was in 2004 the fifth richest person on earth, with a fortune worth 21.5 billion dollars. In the past the prince has invested in various sectors including hotels, banking, telecommunications, media, technology, entertainment, construction, and real estate.

Prince al-Waleed, a member of the Saudi Royal Family, was born in Riyadh in 1955 and is the nephew of late King Fahd.

After attending university in the US - at Menlo college and Syracuse University - al- Waleed created a personal empire, which he manages through his two 'Kingdom' companies.

He is the biggest shareholder in the global financial services company Citigroup and holds stakes in the telecom supplier Motorola, the computer company Hewlett Packard, London's business area Canary Wharf, prestigious New York department store Saks Inc., and Kingdom centre - the tallest building in the Middle East.

Al-Waleed holds significant stakes in entertainment giants Time Warner and Walt Disney and is a leading hotellier, with significant investments in Four Seasons Hotels Resorts, the George V Hotel in Paris, Fairmont Hotels and Resorts and Movenpick Hotels and Resorts.

As well as being a businessman he is also a political activist who has called for a range of reforms in the Saudi Kingdom, including greater rights for women and democratic elections. He recently courted controversy when he took on Saudi Arabia's first ever female pilot, Hanadi Zakaria, to help fly his company's fleet of private jets.

In 2003 Prince Al-Waleed bin Talal funded the construction in Saudi Arabia of 1,000 homes during as a part of his humanitarian project to provide housing for the poor. More recently he financed the Islamic Art wing at Paris' Louvre Museum.






It's not like it wasen't propaganda from oil interests who own this country's policy already...

Now it's official...fox news...fairly and balanced pimping the american people

out for saudi family profit and the oil/big corporate ceos.

I thought they would always be a bit more...discreet about the agenda...

If what you guess becomes reality, FOX will be in chapter 11 within the year.

 

dmcowen674

No Lifer
Oct 13, 1999
54,889
47
91
www.alienbabeltech.com
Originally posted by: Condor
It's not like it wasen't propaganda from oil interests who own this country's policy already...

Now it's official...fox news...fairly and balanced pimping the american people

out for saudi family profit and the oil/big corporate ceos.

I thought they would always be a bit more...discreet about the agenda...

If what you guess becomes reality, FOX will be in chapter 11 within the year.
[/quote]

I certainly hope so for our Country's sake.
 

imported_Condor

Diamond Member
Sep 22, 2004
5,425
0
0
Originally posted by: dmcowen674
Originally posted by: Condor
It's not like it wasen't propaganda from oil interests who own this country's policy already...

Now it's official...fox news...fairly and balanced pimping the american people

out for saudi family profit and the oil/big corporate ceos.

I thought they would always be a bit more...discreet about the agenda...

If what you guess becomes reality, FOX will be in chapter 11 within the year.

I certainly hope so for our Country's sake.[/quote]

But then there will be only the Clinton/Communist News Network. I'm sure you would rather have fair and balanced. From the rest of the thread, once I read through it, there appears to be no real danger.

 

TNM93

Senior member
Aug 13, 2005
965
0
0
Originally posted by: realsup
Muslims should not own a News Channel. Oh wait that is what the Aryan nation would say not the great open minded liberals.


:confused:
 

Steeplerot

Lifer
Mar 29, 2004
13,051
6
81
Originally posted by: realsup
Muslims should not own a News Channel. Oh wait that is what the Aryan nation would say not the great open minded liberals.



saaay whaaat?

the saudi royal family is not your average muslim/arab I could care less about religion assclown...

you know..the whole airplanes going smash..saudi...those guys :roll:
 

Phokus

Lifer
Nov 20, 1999
22,994
779
126
The republican party and the saudi royal families have lots of connections, this isn't surprising.