"My instincts today are that Liberty does not need me," Karmazin said at the Bank of America Merrill Lynch Media, Communications & Entertainment Conference in Los Angeles.
Karmazin's contract as CEO of Sirius XM runs through the end of the year. Liberty has been purchasing shares on the open market, driving the stock higher in recent months. Between the recently acquired shares and the preferred stock it already had, Liberty owns slightly less than 50 percent of the company, according to a recent filing.
Karmazin said he has had little contact with Liberty's John Mallone or its CEO, Greg Maffei, since Liberty began its quest in May to control Sirius XM -- not when Liberty tried unsuccessfully for de facto control, and not since it began purchasing large chunks of stock.
Karmazin said he plans to stick around while control for the company remains in flux, but he will not negotiate a new contract during these uncertain times for the company because he wants to avoid the appearance of "conspiring against minority shareholders."
Maffei is scheduled to speak at the same conference later Wednesday.
Liberty has filed its request with the FCC to take control of Sirius XM, though a 30-day period of public comment hasn't been set yet. When Sirius and XM merged, a similar 30-day period stretched to 17 months, but Karmazin said he expects Liberty's gambit to be much quicker and noncontroversial.
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