French media giant Canal+ has barely settled into its blockbuster takeover of MultiChoice, and already the company is staring down a potentially expensive legal and regulatory storm in South Africa.
Just months after finalising its roughly $2 billion acquisition of the broadcaster behind DStv, Showmax and SuperSport, Canal+ now finds itself tied to a Competition Commission case that could have serious financial and reputational implications across the continent.
South Africa’s Competition Commission has officially referred MultiChoice and electronics supplier Altech UEC South Africa to the Competition Tribunal over allegations of anti-competitive conduct linked to the country’s pay-TV market, as reported by Business Insider Africa.
At the centre of the dispute is an agreement that allegedly dates back to February 2014.
According to regulators, MultiChoice and Altech entered into an arrangement that effectively kept Altech from entering or competing in the South African pay-TV space, where MultiChoice already dominated.
In a statement released on Monday, 4 May 2026, the Competition Commission said its investigation found that: ‘MultiChoice and Altech reached an agreement for Altech not to enter or compete in the pay-TV market where MultiChoice operates.’
Authorities are now seeking an order declaring both companies in violation of Section 4(1)(b)(ii) of the Competition Act, which deals with market division and anti-competitive agreements between firms.
The Commission is also pursuing penalties of up to 10% of each company’s annual turnover.
That figure could become significant very quickly.
Based on estimates tied to MultiChoice’s South African revenue, analysts believe the broadcaster could potentially face penalties worth around $244 million if the Tribunal rules against the companies.
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Because Canal+ now owns MultiChoice, any major financial hit would ultimately land on the French media group’s balance sheet.
The timing is particularly uncomfortable for Canal+, which has presented the MultiChoice deal as one of the most important steps in its long-term African growth strategy.
The company has repeatedly spoken about expanding its influence across African entertainment markets while unlocking major operational savings through the acquisition.
Investor presentations previously projected annual savings of roughly $176 million in the first year following the takeover, with expected efficiencies climbing to over $471 million annually later in the decade.
But this latest legal battle introduces a fresh layer of uncertainty.
Industry observers say the case could affect Canal+’s regulatory standing in Africa’s biggest broadcasting market at a time when governments across the continent are paying closer attention to competition concerns in telecoms, streaming and media sectors.
For South African viewers, the case also revives long-running conversations around competition in the local pay-TV industry.
For years, MultiChoice has held a dominant position in subscription television through DStv, while rivals have struggled to gain meaningful ground in the market.
Critics have often argued that barriers to entry in South Africa’s pay-TV sector remain extremely high due to infrastructure costs, licensing challenges and content rights.
The Competition Commission’s latest move is likely to reignite public debate around whether the market has been sufficiently open to competition over the past decade.
So far, MultiChoice has continued to deny wrongdoing and has not publicly commented on the latest referral to the Tribunal.
No hearing date has yet been announced.
The case now places Canal+ in an unfamiliar position shortly after entering one of Africa’s most important media markets, not as the new owner celebrating expansion, but as a company forced to navigate regulatory pressure almost immediately after completing one of the continent’s biggest entertainment deals.
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