
Rogers hopes to ride MLSE deal, NHL rights extension to higher share price
TORONTO — The chief executive of Rogers Communications Inc. says the company is keen to unlock underappreciated value from its growing collection of sports assets after extending its national hockey broadcast rights and signing a deal to expand its stake in Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment.
Rogers believes its sports portfolio is now “unrivalled in Canada” and among the “best in the world,” said president and CEO Tony Staffieri on Wednesday, but he acknowledged that value isn’t reflected in its share price.
“Our priority is to change this,” Staffieri said in his prepared remarks to analysts on Rogers’ first-quarter earnings call.
“Sports assets continue to appreciate significantly in value and that’s why investors remain very interested in holding a minority position in these appreciating assets.”