Once again this is a huge exaggeration about what 9 is actually paying. Yes, the total figure is reportedly $925m but in the fine print reporting it says this "includes contra". In other words, a significant portion of the total is free advertising on 9.
The total also includes digital rights, and the only things left to sell are Pay TV (which will be receiving significantly less than they currently have), international rights (negligible value) and New Zealand. Not a whole lot left to sell.
All this at a time when their has been 2 recent significant stories about Channel 9:
1. In today's Australian, in the Media section, it reports that channel 9 has been forced to offer half price advertising. A quote from the story:
"Nine has been secretly propping up its faltering share of the free-to-air television market by selling advertisers half-price online ads.
To stop advertisers pulling marketing budgets because of weak TV ratings, Nine has sweetened its television inventory with sharply discounted online advertisements as long as advertisers agree to maintain their spend levels on Nine’s TV channels. The ploy is designed to stop Nine’s share of the $3.4 billion TV ad market plummeting any further following a shock earnings downgrade in June that smashed it share price."
2. Note the mention of "smashed share price" at the end of that story. The rise of Netflix has destroyed 9's share price. Channel 9 listed in December 2013 at a price of $2.05 a share. Today's price? It closed at $1.40.