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Media's AI Pivot
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Sky and ITV settle £1.6bn terms

3 min read
16:44UTC

Sky and ITV agreed terms on 25 June for Sky to buy ITV's Media & Entertainment arm, including ITVX, for £1.6bn, pending Ofcom and CMA clearance.

IndustryDeveloping
Key takeaway

Sky and ITV agreed £1.6bn terms for ITV's broadcast arm, still pending regulatory clearance.

Sky, the Comcast-owned broadcaster, and ITV agreed terms on Thursday 25 June for Sky to buy ITV's Media & Entertainment arm for £1.6bn.1 The arm carries ITV's linear channels and the ITVX streaming service; Love Productions, maker of The Great British Bake Off, moves to ITV Studios, which stays out of the deal.

The price matches the figure Sky floated in last month's advanced talks , which ITV chief executive Carolyn McCall confirmed were actively engaged at the Enders Analysis conference on 4 June . Agreed terms move the deal a step past talks but stop short of a signature: a formal announcement is expected within about two weeks, and the UK's media regulator Ofcom and the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) must clear it.

If the deal closes, ITV inherits Comcast's AI production stack without running its own procurement, and the future of Sky News and ITV News goes onto the table.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

ITV is the UK's largest commercial broadcaster, best known for Coronation Street, Love Island, and the ITV News. Sky is the UK's largest pay-TV company, owned by the American firm Comcast. On 25 June 2026, the two agreed that Sky would buy ITV's television channels and its streaming service ITVX for £1.6bn. The deal doesn't include ITV's production studio (ITV Studios), which makes programmes and sells them internationally, or Love Productions, which makes The Great British Bake Off. Those remain separate. The deal needs approval from Ofcom (the UK broadcasting regulator) and the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) before it can complete. In 2010, a much smaller investment by Sky's predecessor in ITV was blocked by regulators on concern that one company would become too dominant in UK broadcasting; whether this full purchase raises the same concern is the central regulatory question.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

ITV's linear advertising revenue declined structurally after 2022 as streaming hours displaced broadcast minutes among under-50 audiences. ITV's M&E arm at £1.6bn reflects a valuation based on declining linear advertising revenue, not ITVX's growth trajectory, which remains sub-scale at under 2 million paying subscribers. ITV could not sustain the capital expenditure required to build ITVX to competing scale against Netflix, Disney+, and Amazon without a financially stronger parent.

Comcast's rationale runs in the opposite direction: Sky's UK pay-TV bundle needs a free-to-air broadcast complement that gives subscribers a reason not to cut the pay-TV cord when streaming alternatives proliferate. ITV's Channel 3 audience, still over 10 million peak viewers for major events, provides that complement at a valuation Comcast can justify against Sky's subscriber-retention economics.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    Ofcom may impose public-interest conditions on ITV Channel 3's must-carry news obligations under Sky ownership, constraining Sky's ability to integrate ITV's schedule into its commercial ad-targeting architecture post-close.

  • Consequence

    ITVX's 40 million-plus registered users become a first-party data asset under Sky's NBCU-aligned ad-tech stack, creating a UK-wide CTV (connected TV) targeting capability Comcast has lacked since Sky launched in the UK.

First Reported In

Update #7 · WBD rebuilds its ad stack on agentic AI

Deadline· 28 Jun 2026
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