EU Equity Tool MediaInvest, InvestEU Ink Four Deals, Aiming to Inject $530 Million in Europe’s Audiovisual, Creative Companies, Projects

SAN SEBASTIAN — MediaInvest, a new EU equity tool managed by the European Investment Fund, which targets the audiovisual industry with €400 million ($424 million) over 2022-27, has made its first deal: An equity agreement with France’s Logical Content Ventures, part of Logical Pictures. InvestEU CCS Guarantee has closed three debt financing agreements, with Spain’s Cersa and Crea and Luxembourg-based The Archers.

Announced Sunday at the San Sebastian Film Festival following on a Spain-hosted EU Conference, the agreements are worth a total of €68.25 million ($72.35 million). They are expected to leverage around €500 million ($530 million) of new financing for audiovisual and creative companies and projects, the European Commission, the EU’s executive arm, confirmed Monday.

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MediaInvest “provides a response to one of the pressing challenges in Europe for audiovisual companies: the lack of access to finance. This will strengthen the financial capacities of European companies, enable them to get better value for the intellectual property they create and in turn boost their growth and international exposure,” Renate Nikolay, European Commission deputy director-general for DG CNECT, told Variety.

Launched in Cannes last year by Commissioner Thierry Bréton, MediaInvest’s ultimate goal is to boost investment in the audiovisual sector and to encourage the creation of audiovisual equity funds, the Commission said Monday in a statement.

Given the intense due diligence conducted by the EIF on any company receiving EU moneys, its funding can have a cascade effect, attracting investment from private-sector third parties, Logical Pictures president Fréderic Fiore explained to Variety.

The EIF has approved an investment of up to €25 million ($26.5 million) in Logical Content Ventures. Benefiting from a co-investment partnership with France’s Pathé, one of its biggest production-distribution-exhibition conglomerates, LCV aims to raise up to €70 million ($74.2 million) in equity investment in European audiovisual production and distribution companies.

LCV focuses on the production of movies, TV series and impact content across Europe, dealing with women’s empowerment, diversity and human rights.

“Very flexible,” said Fiore, LCV invests against worldwide rights, recouping from international minimum guarantees, as well as P&A for a films domestic market release.

Its investment strategy, Fiore explained to Variety, is that while the international theatrical value of films has plummeted over the last two decades, thanks to the VOD explosion, movies’ total value in the international market place has increased.

Via  the InvestEU CCS Guarantee scheme, the EIF has also signed with MDDG, a new Luxembourg-based fund, acting as a general partner of its investment vehicles The Archers and The Archers Production.

MDDG is specialised in investments in the audiovisual sector, mainly financing the co-production of films and TV series. The EIF €8.25 million ($8.75 million) guarantee line aims to leverage a portfolio of around €50 million ($53 million) in financing.

The Archers is also financing against international, being “a fund open for European independent producers and European sales company to send a project that needs financing,” Grumbach said at the San Sebastian signature ceremony with the EIF on Sunday.

“We will assess projects’ international potential thanks to sales estimates, script reviews like the usual job of a sales company, of a local distributor,” he added, saying the fund is looking for “projects with a clear international vision, a local project going global.”

The EIF has also inked a €20 million ($21.2 million) guarantee line with Compañía Española de Reafianzamiento (Cersa), a Spanish non-profit promotional counter-guarantee institution which underwrites other bank loan guarantee institutions in Spain and targets all cultural and creatives sectors.

The support is expected to leverage a portfolio of around €230 million ($243.8 million) of counter-guarantees, enabling the network of Spanish mutual guarantee institutions to offer enhanced access to finance in the cultural and creative sectors in Spain (including film, theatre, video game production, music and performance, and editorial fields), the Commission said Monday.

Available to SMEs, “the loans will translate into increased support for their ecosystem which often faces difficulties in accessing finance due to the limited size of the market and demand uncertainty, among other issues,” it added.

Madrid-based CREA, a private-sector mutual guarantee institution focusing on SMEs and mid-caps audiovisual companies, will benefit from an €15 million ($15.9 million) EIF guarantee line. With Cersa as a coordination entity, that is expected to leverage a portfolio of around €145 million ($153.7 million) of guarantees.

Guaranteeing financial institutions’ credit facilities to producers may seem to offset risk for lenders, but simply raise risk for producers. Rafael Lambea, CREA director general, observed that, “unlike other industry sectors, the more ambitious and scale a project has, the less risk it entails.”

“We are not starting from scratch,” said Nikolay. “We started in 2016 easing access to finance to audiovisual SMEs through the so-called Cultural and Creative Sectors Guarantee Facility (CCS FG).”

“The results so far have exceeded our expectations: €3.4 billion ($3.6 million) of investment have been mobilised and more than 6,400 companies from across the European Union have benefitted from loans and guarantees,” she added.

CREA’s own guarantees are in fact a CCS FG product.

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