NEW YORK (NYT NEWS SERVICE).- James Murdoch, son of billionaire media mogul Rupert Murdoch, is set to take a significant stake in MCH Group, the Swiss owners of the Art Basel fairs.
Investment from James Murdochs company, Lupa Systems, will help transform the company from a traditional events business into one focused on future-oriented platforms and communities, MCH said in a statement Friday.
If the move is approved at a meeting Aug. 3, Murdochs company will own about one-third of MCHs shares, rising to a possible 44% controlling stake later, the statement added.
Founded in 1970 by three gallerists in the Swiss city, Art Basel has grown into the worlds biggest and most prestigious international art fair business. Its flagship event in Basel in June, which last year attracted 93,000 visitors, has become the centerpiece of Europes summer art market calendar. Art Basel Hong Kong, typically held in March, has enabled Western dealers to significantly expand the market for international contemporary art in Asia. And Art Basel Miami Beach has gained a reputation for attracting the hippest American collectors and works by the hottest new artists.
But MCH has faced a challenging year. The 2020 and 2021 editions of its Baselworld watch fair for years the companys highest-grossing event were canceled because of an exodus of key exhibitors. The coronavirus pandemic led to the cancellation of the Hong Kong and Swiss editions of Art Basel, though they continued as online-only events. An in-person gathering for Art Basel Miami Beach, scheduled for December, remains in doubt.
Sales losses in the region of about $138 million to $180 million were predicted for this year in the companys 2019 annual report, which was released in March.
The statement Friday added that MCH will propose to shareholders a comprehensive set of measures to restructure its debt, including an injection of about $111 million, mostly from Murdochs company.
The Canton of Basel-Stadt, the administrative region that is home to the city of Basel, is currently MCHs largest shareholder, at 33.5%, and other Swiss regions own smaller percentages. But those public-sector shareholders have agreed to step back and allow Murdochs privately held Lupa Systems to become the largest, the statement added.
Marc Spiegler, Art Basels global director, said in a statement that approval of the proposed measures would put the group on firm financial footing for the foreseeable future.
He also praised Lupa Systems valuable expertise and networks in technology, digitalization and the broader cultural sphere.
Murdochs private investment company was founded in 2019 after his familys $71.3 billion sale of Twenty-First Century Fox, at which he was chief executive. With offices in New York and in Mumbai, India, Lupa has bought stakes in a range of tech-savvy media companies, including Vice, the news platform aimed at millennials, and Morning Consult, a data intelligence company.
Murdoch is also on the board of trustees of the Dia Art Foundation in New York and a former director of Sothebys.
Lupas commitment to MCH is the latest significant investment by a global media business in international art fairs. In 2016, Hollywood-based William Morris Endeavor Entertainment acquired a major stake in the Frieze Art Fair, which has editions in London, New York and Los Angeles.
It will certainly give some certainty to MCH after a very difficult year, said Robert Read, head of art and private clients at Hiscox, a leading specialist in art insurance, based in London.
The most fascinating part will be seeing what they mean by future-orientated platforms and communities, he said. That is the crux of the issue.
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