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Wireless Group plc
Company typePublic limited company
LSEWLG
Template:Ise
IndustryBroadcasting
Founded17 February 1959
HeadquartersBelfast, Northern Ireland
Key people
Richard Huntingford
(Chairman)
John McCann
(Chief Executive)
RevenueDecrease £116 m (2014)[1]
Websitewww.wirelessgroupplc.com

Wireless Group plc, formerly UTV Media, is a broadcasting and new media company based in Belfast in Northern Ireland. It is a constituent of the FTSE SmallCap Index. The company operates the UK independent national radio station talkSPORT, Virgin Radio UK, and 16 other radio stations in the United Kingdom and 5 in Ireland.

History

Origins

The company began after being awarded the franchise for ITV programmes to Northern Ireland and Ireland in 1958. The service launched as Ulster Television on 31 October 1959 and subsequently rebranded to UTV in 1993.

Expansion

Wireless Group headquarters at Havelock House

In March 2000, the company purchased ISP Direct Net Access for £4.4m, rebranding it as UTV Internet and later UTV Connect. The service expanded into telephone market under UTV Talk in August 2004 and also provided broadband and fibre optic packages for Northern Ireland, the Republic and the rest of the UK.[2] The service was sold to Rainbow Communications and Vodafone Ireland in 2014.

The company also set up an online car dealership UTV Drive, created in partnership with Abbey Insurance, which was sold in 2014.[3]

Further expansion took place with the move into radio, starting in Cork with 96FM and C103 in 2001. Further acquisitions were undertaken over the next decade, with the largest investment being the purchase of The Wireless Group in 2005 for £97m, boosting its radio portfolio with additional local stations, digital radio multiples and national station TalkSPORT. In 2005, the group also launched its first station, U105, which broadcasts to the Belfast area, and purchased Juice FM in Liverpool .

With the expansion, turnover increased, with 2005 being up 46% on 2004, pre-tax profits rising by 12%, and employment up by 500 people to more than double the figure in the previous year. In 2006, total sales were £113.6m of which the radio division accounted for 54%, television 37% and 9% from new media. 48% of operating profits were earned in the radio side of the business, with 47% derived from television and 5% from new media.

Reorganisation and proposed mergers

Following shareholder approval, the company changed its name from Ulster Television plc to UTV plc in June 2006.[4] Then, on 16 August 2007, a re-orginsation of the group was proposed, with the existing UTV plc, holding the ITV franchise only, becoming a wholly owned subsidiary of new holding company, UTV Media plc, and the remaining businesses transferred to the new holding company. The change was approved at an extraordinary general meeting on 19 September and came into effect on 15 October 2007, with shareholders receiving a 1:1 exchange of stock from the old to new company [5][6]

In August and September 2006, the company made two merger proposals to STV Group plc, operator of the northern and central Scottish ITV franchises as STV. The latter proposal would have given SMG shareholders 52% of the merged company. On 20 September 2006, the plans were abandoned after SMG rejected the offer as unacceptable.[7] However, on 10 January 2007, the two companies announced that they had agreed a merger, with SMG shareholders to receive 46% of the merged company and UTV 54%.[8] After the details were expected to be finalised before the end of January, the deal was put on hold and then called off by SMG on 28 February 2007.[9]

Further radio expansion, UTV Ireland and sale of UTV

In January 2015, the company launched UTV Ireland, carrying many of ITV's programming including Coronation Street and Emmerdale, which had been previously broadcast in Ireland by TV3. The station produces some home-grown programming, including the twice-nightly national news programme Ireland Live.

On 27 March 2015, it was confirmed that Sound Digital, which was 30% owned by the company, had been successful in its bid for the second national digital radio multiplex in the UK, which would be launched in 2016. As part of the bid, the company would expand its talkSPORT station with new sister stations talkSPORT2, talkRADIO and talkBUSINESS, as well as running a relaunched Virgin Radio UK.[10] The multiplex was launched on 29 February 2016, with the new stations launching over the following month less talkBUSINESS, which was replaced by Share Radio on the multiplex.[11]

On 19 October 2015, it was announced that ITV plc would acquire UTV's ITV franchise and UTV Ireland for £100 million, subject to regulatory approval. UTV retained its radio operations, but was required to rename itself after including the UTV brand in the sale.[12]

The sale to ITV plc was completed on 29 February 2016, when the company also rebranded as Wireless Group plc.[13]

Operations

The company splits its operations into three divisions, Radio GB, Radio Ireland and Digital.

Radio GB

Formed from the original Wireless Group purchase, the divisions has its origins from Talk Radio, the owner of the station of the same name, later renamed talkSPORT in 2000. A consortium including MVI, News International, Radio Investments and LMC Radio, headed by chief executive Kelvin MacKenzie, under the name TalkCo, purchase the group in 1998 for £15.5m. The company expanded when it purchased The Radio Partnership in 1999, gaining control of its nine local commercial stations and becoming the fifth largest radio company in the UK.

Radio Ireland

Other divisions

The company publishes a free, London-based men's magazine called Sport.

Wireless Group also owns the digital agency Simply Zesty and the internet hosting provider Tibus.[14]

References

  1. ^ "Preliminary Announcement" (PDF). UTV Media. 2 September 2015. Retrieved 26 March 2014.
  2. ^ Television, News, Internet and Telephony services from UTV in Northern Ireland
  3. ^ UTV Drive
  4. ^ UTV Plc – UTV Notice of 2005 AGM
  5. ^ "UTV PLC: Result of EGM". Investegate. Retrieved 5 March 2016.
  6. ^ "UTV Media PLC: First Day of Dealings". Investegate. Retrieved 25 July 2015.
  7. ^ "UTV scraps plans for STV merger". BBC News. 20 September 2006. Retrieved 5 March 2016.
  8. ^ Edgecliffe-Johnson, Andrew (11 December 2006). "SMG comes cap in hand back to UTV". Financial Times. Retrieved 5 March 2016.
  9. ^ Crawley-Boevey, Sarah (28 February 2007). "SMG and UTV call off merger plan". Media Week. Retrieved 5 March 2016.
  10. ^ "Sound Digital wins national DAB multiplex". RadioToday. Retrieved 5 March 2016.
  11. ^ "A dozen stations launched on new DAB multiplex". RadioToday. Retrieved 5 March 2016.
  12. ^ "UTV Media agrees sale of TV stations to ITV for £100m". BBC News. Retrieved 19 October 2015.
  13. ^ McDonnell, Francess (29 February 2016). "UTV rebrands as Wireless Group and shifts focus to radio". Irish Times. Retrieved 5 March 2016.
  14. ^ "UTV buys Dublin-based PR agency Simply Zesty". BBC News. 6 March 2012. Retrieved 5 March 2016.