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Daily Mail Owner Strikes £500mn Deal to Buy The Telegraph

 |  November 23, 2025

Daily Mail and General Trust (DMGT), the owner of the Daily Mail, has agreed to acquire The Telegraph in a £500mn transaction that could significantly reshape Britain’s right-leaning press, according to the Financial Times. The move positions DMGT to become one of the most influential voices on the UK’s conservative media spectrum.

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    The agreement follows the abrupt withdrawal of RedBird Capital, the US private equity firm that had previously been pursuing the 170-year-old Telegraph. RedBird stepped back after the UK government did not provide a clear timeline for concluding the sale, per the Financial Times. The firm had intervened after an earlier deal involving its Abu Dhabi partner collapsed, but ultimately abandoned the effort amid prolonged uncertainty.

    For Lord Rothermere, DMGT’s aristocratic owner, the acquisition marks the fulfilment of a long-held ambition. His interest in uniting the Daily Mail with The Telegraph — two of the UK’s most prominent right-leaning titles — was first reported by the Financial Times. DMGT also controls the i and Metro newspapers, though people close to the talks indicated these assets may be sold to ease potential regulatory concerns.

    The £500mn price tag would effectively reimburse the RedBird-led consortium for its earlier financial outlay on The Telegraph. Both parties are now in an exclusivity period as they work to finalise the transaction’s terms.

    If approved, the merger would draw a line under one of the most protracted media sales in recent British history. The Telegraph has spent roughly two years in limbo amid government scrutiny and leadership uncertainty. Those close to the negotiations hope ministers will recognise the importance of stabilising ownership of a newspaper with substantial political influence.

    In a statement on Saturday, DMGT said it “believes that the proposed acquisition would give much-needed certainty and confidence to TMG’s employees”. The company has also signalled plans to grow The Telegraph’s international reach, especially in the United States.

    Regulators are expected to examine the deal closely. Both the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) and Ofcom will review potential issues around media plurality, circulation dominance, and advertising power. Government ministers, meanwhile, may face political pressure to ensure the preservation of diverse viewpoints across the national press.

    Concerns are likely to emerge over the prospect of the so-called “Torygraph” falling under the same ownership as the Daily Mail, especially within the Labour party, which has frequently been the subject of sharp criticism from both publications since last year’s election.

    Not all reactions have been negative. Former Sun editor David Yelland said: “This deal is huge: the Rupert Murdoch era of dominance in the still-powerful UK newspaper market is over. This fuses two of the most potent, professional — though toxic and angry — news empires in the world.”

    Rothermere, who inherited leadership of DMGT at age 30 following his father’s death in 1998, stands to secure a major personal and corporate victory. His great-grandfather Harold Harmsworth founded the Daily Mail in 1896, cementing the family’s long-standing stake in Britain’s media establishment.

    DMGT emphasised that the transaction involves no foreign state investment, stating that it complies fully with the UK’s Foreign State Influence regime. Recent legal changes limit sovereign wealth funds to a maximum 15 per cent stake in news organisations — a rule introduced after concerns arose about Abu Dhabi’s IMI, RedBird’s former partner, potentially exerting excessive influence.

    Source: The Financial Times