---
title: "How Lachlan Murdoch Closed The Family Business: A Tactical Move To Settling Succession And Preserving Legacy"
description: Murdoch heirs forge a multi-billion family trust that concentrates voting power with Lachlan, safeguards Fox News and converts succession disputes to liquidity.
author: Darie Nani (Editor-in-Chief)
date: 2025-09-09T10:34:22.000Z
updated: 2026-07-10T13:05:04.374Z
canonical: https://richdadmagazine.com/article/how-lachlan-murdoch-closed-the-family-business-a-tactical-move-to-settling-succession-and-pre
image: https://cdn.nanimediahouse.com/e922a851-9522-4f55-8d36-e11ceedc59b5.jpg
categories: Money & Legacy
content_type: Analysis
region: Nevada
publication: Rich Dad Magazine
---

On 8 September 2025, the Murdoch siblings agreed to sell their personal holdings, producing roughly $1.1 billion each for Prudence, Elisabeth and James whilst creating a new family trust for Lachlan and two younger siblings valued at about $3.3 billion. This resolves a highly public succession dispute that played out in Reno in 2024 and has been compared to the television series Succession.

## The Legal Framework That Nearly Failed

The original 1999 trust arrangement allocated voting shares to Rupert's four eldest children following his divorce from Anna Murdoch Mann. Under this structure, News Corp and Fox voting shares would transfer equally to Prudence, Elisabeth, Lachlan and James upon Rupert's death.

However, when Rupert attempted to amend this irrevocable trust to consolidate power with Lachlan, the Reno probate court rejected the proposal in December 2024, finding that Rupert and Lachlan acted in 'bad faith' when seeking to change the trust terms.

The practical problem driving the amendment attempt was straightforward: Lachlan's operational control of both companies depended on family alignment, yet three siblings held different political orientations that could threaten the conservative editorial positioning central to Fox News' commercial success. For a media business where audience ideology directly drives advertising revenue, ideological uncertainty represented an existential business risk.

## The Deal Mechanics

The transaction involved the sale of approximately 16.9 million Fox Corp Class B voting shares and about 14.2 million News Corp Class B shares, priced at roughly a 4.5% discount to the last close, raising about $1.37 billion. The new family trust will hold roughly 36% of Fox's Class B and 33% of News Corp's Class B shares, with voting control consolidated under Lachlan's direction.

Concentrating Class B voting stock into a single trust secures long-term control whilst providing liquidity to dissenting heirs. The arrangement preserves leadership continuity: Lachlan remains executive chairman of Fox and chairman of News Corp, stabilising day-to-day operations and direction. This structure eliminates the succession uncertainty that had created governance paralysis within the family trust.

However, single-beneficiary-style voting control creates potential governance risks. Minority shareholders may view concentrated control as limiting their influence, potentially inviting regulatory scrutiny or proxy challenges. [Regulatory oversight failures can devastate businesses](https://richdadmagazine.com/article/hard-lessons-for-business-leaders-what-the-post-office-scandal-teaches-private-business-bf56d9), making transparent governance structures essential.

The arrangement's durability depends on transparent rules for trustee succession and clear exit mechanisms should younger beneficiaries later dispute the structure.

From a commercial perspective, the governance clarity provides immediate business benefits. [Fox News maintained 2.3 million primetime viewers in August 2025](https://www.adweek.com/tvnewser/here-are-the-cable-news-ratings-for-august-2025/), making it the highest-rated cable news channel. This audience represents substantial advertising revenue that underpins the economic value driving the entire settlement.

The settlement preserves Fox News' conservative editorial approach, which directly correlates to its commercial performance. With consistent primetime viewership exceeding competitors by significant margins, the network's ideological positioning translates into advertiser premium pricing and audience loyalty that would be difficult to replicate under different editorial management.

'You know that there will always be a conservative guardian of Fox News. And frankly, if I were a shareholder, I would really think this was a very good move,' said Claire Enders, CEO and founder of UK-based media research firm Enders Analysis. The comment reflects investor preference for predictable editorial direction over family governance uncertainty.

## Tactical Lessons For Owners And Heirs

Three specific mechanisms enabled this resolution and offer templates for other family businesses facing succession disputes:

**Use trusts deliberately:** Establish clear beneficiary definitions, successor trustee protocols and voting mechanisms that limit ambiguities fueling litigation. The original 1999 Murdoch trust's equal voting provisions created deadlock potential that required expensive court intervention to resolve.

**Build liquidity paths:** Provide structured buyout mechanisms or pre-agreed valuation formulas allowing dissenting heirs to monetise holdings without destroying business value. [Smart business brokers understand that clear exit pricing prevents family disputes](https://richdadmagazine.com/article/father-and-son-dealmakers-how-the-langes-build-value-by-brokering-hvac-sales-53ec96) from escalating into destructive conflicts. The Murdoch settlement's $1.1 billion individual payouts demonstrate how liquidity can convert control disputes into financial settlements.

**Expect litigation as leverage but avoid leaving control unresolved:** Assess legal costs and reputational downsides of public family disputes against negotiated settlements enforced by binding share-sale mechanics. The December 2024 'bad faith' court ruling created pressure that forced settlement negotiations.

## Market Response And Immediate Implications

The settlement removes succession uncertainty that had created operational paralysis within both companies. Clear control structures enable long-term planning and capital allocation decisions that were previously complicated by potential family governance changes.

[Reuters reported](https://www.reuters.com/sustainability/boards-policy-regulation/real-life-succession-ends-lachlan-murdoch-takes-control-siblings-take-cash-2025-09-08/) the arrangement includes restrictions preventing the three departing siblings from acquiring shares in either company, eliminating future challenges to Lachlan's control.

For family business owners, the Murdoch case demonstrates how governance disputes can be converted into structured financial settlements when proper valuation mechanisms and liquidity provisions exist. The key insight involves treating succession as fundamentally a finance problem requiring clear exit pricing rather than an emotional family negotiation.

### Implementation Checklist

Founders should establish succession frameworks before conflicts emerge: define voting control mechanisms, create liquidity options for non-participating heirs, establish trustee succession protocols and implement binding dispute resolution procedures. [Successful family business transitions](https://richdadmagazine.com/article/inside-north-american-farms-how-a-family-keeps-control-while-handing-over-the-reins-21d86e) require clear governance structures that balance control with fairness.

[Harvard Business Review research](https://hbr.org/2022/09/plan-a-smooth-succession-for-your-family-business) indicates that 25% of family business succession failures result from unprepared governance structures.

The Murdoch settlement shows how to convert governance disputes into concentrated control whilst monetising dissenters. [Sophisticated wealth management](https://richdadmagazine.com/article/the-man-quietly-shaping-hollywood-fortunes-mark-pariser-s-old-school-playbook-af277a) requires treating succession planning as financial engineering alongside family diplomacy, ensuring that business value preservation takes priority over emotional family dynamics when conflicts become irreconcilable.
