By Shalini Ramachandran 

Comcast Corp. is much more likely to work with Charter Communications Inc. on a bid for Time Warner Cable Inc. than to pursue an offer on its own, said a person familiar with the situation, a major boost to Charter's hopes of winning the takeover battle.

Comcast's current thinking reflects its unwillingness to pay Time Warner Cable's stated asking price of $160 a share as well as Time Warner Cable's disinterest in selling off just some of its systems piecemeal, the person said.

In contrast, Charter has signaled to Comcast in meetings that, if Charter succeeded in acquiring Time Warner Cable, it would be willing to give up TWC's prize New York-area cable systems to Comcast in exchange for Comcast's endorsement of its bid, said the person.

Charter CEO Tom Rutledge hinted at that stance at a private investor dinner on Thursday, say other people familiar with the situation. Getting the New York systems would be a major victory for Comcast, strengthening its hold on the northeastern U.S. Comcast already dominates Philadelphia and serves part of the New York suburbs.

It would also position Comcast as the most likely bidder for Cablevision Systems Corp., the other major New York-area cable operator that has long been seen as a takeover candidate.

Comcast's shift in thinking comes nearly two weeks after Charter disclosed publicly, for the first time, the takeover offers it has made in recent months for TWC, each so far rejected as being too low. Charter's most recent offer was $132.50 a share, valuing Time Warner Cable at $37.4 billion; Time Warner Cable shares were at $133.70 in 4 p.m. trading on Friday.

Publicly, executives of Charter and its biggest shareholder, Liberty Media Corp., have spent the past couple of weeks trying to win TWC shareholder support for its bid. Privately, however, Charter and Liberty have been trying to persuade Comcast to endorse its offer, rather than make its own bid, say people familiar with the situation.

Comcast and Charter have had "substantive dialogue" about working together on a possible Time Warner Cable deal, say other people familiar with the situation. Under one scenario being discussed, Comcast wouldn't help finance Charter's bid, the person said. But the two companies would agree beforehand on carving up Time Warner Cable's systems once the acquisition was completed, the person said.

A Charter spokesman said its bid for Time Warner Cable is a "stand-alone bid" that "doesn't rely on or require any outside participation."

Comcast posed a major threat to Charter's hopes. Not only does Comcast have a stronger balance sheet, making financing a deal easier, but Time Warner Cable had reached out to Comcast last year about a possible deal, a sign that it preferred a merger with Comcast than Charter.

But Comcast, the biggest cable operator, likely also faced much tougher regulatory hurdles than Charter.

The big question now is whether Charter can negotiate a deal with TWC or whether Charter and Liberty will have to mount a proxy fight at this spring's annual TWC shareholder meeting to get control of the board.

UBS Securities analyst John Hodulik said in a research note Friday that "our own interaction with investors suggests there would be solid support for a deal in the $145 range."

Both Comcast and Time Warner Cable are due to report fourth quarter earnings next week, which will likely focus attention on TWC's operational performance. The cable operator has lagged behind others in the industry, particularly Comcast, in subscriber retention. Comcast has already disclosed that it gained video subscribers in the fourth quarter, the first time in 26 quarters. Comcast CEO Brian Roberts has scheduled a series of investor meetings next week as part of an annual road show.

Write to Shalini Ramachandran at shalini.ramachandran@wsj.com

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