Billionaire media-mogul John Malone and his Liberty Media moved a
step closer on Friday to taking control Sirius XM Radio.
In a filing with the FCC, Liberty asked permission to take "de
jure" control over Sirius XM, having already failed at an attempt to
take "de facto" control. The former requires more than a 50 percent
stake in the company while the latter does not.
Liberty purchased 40 percent of Sirius XM when it basically
rescued the company from bankruptcy three years ago with a $530
million loan, a prudent investment given that the market
capitalization of Sirius XM has swelled to nearly $10 billion since
then.
Liberty has been purchasing shares on the
open market -- driving the price of the stock higher -- in recent
months, so that now it owns 48 percent of Sirius XM. The company
said it will purchase more shares and turn its preferred shares into
common shares to get over the 50 percent threshold, but not
until the FCC approves of its plan to take control of the company.
Shares of Sirius XM rose one percent Friday to
$2.56 and are up about 35 percent since Liberty began its quest for
control.
If Liberty is successful, it's unknown
who would run the company, given that Sirius XM's current CEO, Mel
Karmazin, has said he does not intend to work for Malone.
"Liberty Media is qualified to control Sirius XM," Liberty said
in its FCC application on Friday. "Liberty Media and its current
and previous subsidiaries have held numerous classes of FCC
licenses."
Sirius XM on Friday filed a statement
with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission pledging that it
"will cooperate fully with the Commission in its evaluation of the
application."
Liberty said it could acquire the
necessary shares to own more than 50 percent of the company within
60 days of the FCC's approval.

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