Dish Researching Hostile TiVo Takeover?
It’s been over 5 years since TiVo filed their patent lawsuit against Dish, but we’re finally reaching the endgame of what has been an epic chess match between the two companies. Between the he said/she said arguments that have played out in the press to the endless legal maneuvers by both camps, it has been a long and brutal battle for both. As a TiVo shareholder, I know that I’ve found the long delays especially frustrating.
In the latest development in this high stakes game though, TiVo has managed to pin Dish into a dangerous checkmate situation. With appeals quickly running out, Dish’s options are becoming increasingly limited. While things look pretty dire for Dish, I believe that they may try to play one more dangerous gambit before this game is up.
I think they might try to buy TiVo.
While looking through my traffic logs, I came across a very interesting visitor
In 2006, I wrote an article referencing a poison pill TiVo implemented in 2001. Since Google loves bloggers so much, my story somehow ended up near the top of the page for the search term TiVo poison pill. Given recent analyst chatter that TiVo could be an M&A target, I’m not surprised that people would be interested in taking a closer look at the nuts and bolts behind the agreement, but I was surprised at where my visitor was coming from.
While there is no way for me to know who it was, someone at Echostar’s corporate HQ’s spent 25 minutes researching an article that I wrote on the topic. Their outclick took them to the legal document that contains all of the nitty gritty details on how the pill actually works.
Now, there could be any number of explanations for why someone at Echostar would be interested in TiVo’s anti-takeover provisions, but the most likely one is that they’re interested in making some kind of play at TiVo.
On June 4th, the Eastern District of Texas District Court announced that they were holding Dish in contempt for continuing to infringe on TiVo’s timewarp patent. (via Mainers’ Law Library) Dish may have been able to get a temporary stay on the injunction, but the eventual impact of the ruling could end up being devastating.
The order against them contains two crucial components, the first is a requirement to disable all infringing DVRs. For Dish to comply with this portion of the injunction, it will probably cost somewhere in the neighborhood of $300 – $400 million. This type of expense would hurt, but it wouldn’t necessarily put them behind the 8-ball.
The far more damaging portion of Folsom’s order is the infringement provision. This prevents Echostar from replacing these DVRs with other DVR set top boxes.
“The DVR functionality, storage to and playback from a hard disk drive, shall not be enabled in any new placements of the Infringing Products.” (bold added by me)
The inability to offer a DVR to their customers would put Dish at a severe competitive disadvantage. Furthermore, because Dish has now been caught trying to sneak a “replacement” DVR in through a redesigned back door, they now must seek court approval prior to deploying any new DVR solutions.
Now I realize that there are still a lot of people who haven’t adopted DVR technology yet, but for those who have, you know that once you get a sweet taste for time shifted entertainment, there’s no going back.
Survey after survey after survey has confirmed that people LOVE their DVRs and while I can’t speak for others, I know that if my television provider disabled my ability to record television, it would take less than a week before I found a replacement.
Dish doesn’t breakdown their current number of DVR subscribers, but during their most recent earnings call, Dish CEO Charlie Ergen acknowledged that the “majority” of their customers buy advanced DVRs and/or HD services. This would suggest that that as many as 8 million Dish subscribers could potentially lose access to DVR technology.
While the cost of replacing the set top boxes could hurt Dish’s earnings, the loss of even 10% of their subscriber base would do terrible things to their stock price. Customer defections and the inability to remain competitive could easily cost Dish shareholders, $3 – 4 billion in lost market cap.
Given the strength of TiVo’s position, several analysts have suggested that Dish may finally be ready to enter into a settlement agreement with TiVo and while forfeiting the game at this late stage would help to prevent an unmitigated disaster for Dish, I don’t believe that TiVo is willing to accept such a forfeit.
Instead I think TiVo is planning a North Korea strategy. For years, they’ve been unable to command respect in their industry and as more and more generic DVRs have hit the market, TiVo has seen their market share eaten away by larger competitors. Now that TiVo possesses a nuclear DVR patent, it opens up new avenues for “conversations” between them and their competitors.
A fat royalty check from Dish would be good for TiVo shareholders, but having the ability to strike fear into the heart of the MSO industry is worth considerably more in increased pricing power. Some may believe that a settlement is inevitable, but I believe that TiVo would have already entered into an agreement long ago, if they weren’t crazy enough to actually push the red button.
Even before TiVo’s latest legal victory, this bargaining power has enabled them to forge agreements with Cox, Comcast and DirecTV. Once companies like Time Warner and AT&T realize that TiVo is both ready and willing to put this kind of hurt on a business, it makes it a lot more palpable to swallow the carrot that TiVo offers through DVR partnerships.
If you assume that TiVo will eventually win this case and that they have no intention of settling with Dish, the only logical move left for Dish to try and make is an expensive acquisition.
After five years of litigation, I would hate to see Dish win this by seizing control of a company that they’ve done everything to squash. Fortunately for TiVo they should have a lot of leverage to negotiate. Their pill wouldn’t prevent an outright acquisition, but it would make it extremely expensive for someone to buy TiVo without the board of Director’s approval.
Based on my understanding of the complex agreement, in the event that Dish (or another acquirer) were to accumulate more than 15% of TiVo’s shares (or even announce the intention to acquire more than 15% of the shares), it would trip a provision that would entitle the other TiVo shareholders to a special $60 per share dividend
This means that if Dish were to forcibly acquire TiVo, it would cost them $71 per share or close to $7.5 billion (more than Dish’s entire market cap.) If Dish tried to pay for the transaction in stock, TiVo shareholders would be entitled to $13.5 billion ($131 per share) in the buyout.
With TiVo’s stock currently trading at $1.15 billion ($11 per share), this type of premium would be too bitter of a pill for Dish to swallow.
While it’s possible that we could see Dish challenge the poison pill legally (I hear that they have an attorney or two working for them), the only other option that I can see around this restriction would be for Dish to somehow convince TiVo shareholders to get rid of the pill at next month’s annual shareholder meeting.
This would be a long shot in and of itself (and one that I’m not even sure would be allowed per TiVo’s bylaws), but this feat is made even more difficult when you consider the fact that you would have had to have been a TiVo shareholder prior to the most recent judgment, in order to be eligible to vote on this kind of initiative.
While I’m doubtful that Echostar would succeed in an attempt to acquire TiVo, at the very least it’s interesting to see them thinking about it.
Posted on June 9th, 2009 by Davis
Filed under: Disclosure - I own stock in co. mentioned, TV, Technology, TiVo

Thanks for the input Dave, hard to get at this type of data. Would be very interesting to know what articles other bloggers are finding Echostar visiting.
Please re-read the language of the injunction you quoted above. Dish is not prohibited from replacing the infrining DVR’s with DVR’s that are not covered under the court order. Their newer DVR’s that were not part of the original lawsuit are not covered under the injunction and could be used to replace the infringing DVR’s in the hands of customers. Of course, this is a lot of DVR’s. Echostar states that Dish has an unusually high number of set top boxes in inventory right now. These could be primarily DVR’s. It is still pretty far fetched that they could replace all the infringing DVR’s and not settle with TIVO.
Good point pfriend, but a minor technicality. TiVo is expected to raise the issue of new DVRs at their next hearing and given their track record on these issues, I’ve got no reason to doubt that they’ll be able to expand the injunction to cover Dish’s current receivers.
GREAT INFORMATION–
THE LEVERAGE THAT THIS WILL GIVE TIYO IS ALL IMPORTANT . THEY MAY JUST ALLOW DISH TO CONTINUE
IF THEY WILL PAY $5.00 A BOX,
MAY BE EVEN HIGHER .
Actually pfriend, it has yet to be determined whether the VIP622, VIP722 and VIP922 are more than colorably different than the adjudicated infringing DVRs. Dish will have to let the courts decide if they don’t infringe. There are 4 million known infringing DVRs and possibily 3 million more.
The ruling clearly states that any attempted work-arounds hereafter must be approved by the court. That is very onerous task for Dish. But remember, Dish was found in contempt of court.
Tivo could have a shareholder lawsuit if they don’t settle or if they don’t accept a reasonable buyout offer. I don’t think putting Dish out of business is in their best interest just to flex their muscles.
Nothing that Charlie Ergen would do would surprise me at this point.