Paramount Skydance has prevailed in the high-stakes takeover battle for Warner Bros. Discovery after Netflix declined to match the David Ellison-led group’s improved offer, reshaping the competitive landscape of the global media and streaming industry.
Warner’s board determined that Paramount’s $31-per-share all-cash proposal for the entire company was superior to Netflix’s earlier agreement to purchase Warner’s film and television studios and the HBO Max streaming platform at $27.75 per share.
The revised Paramount bid values the company at roughly $81 billion and, pending regulatory approval, would place Warner Bros., HBO, and major cable networks, including CNN, TNT, TBS, and Food Network, under Paramount’s control.
Netflix executives made clear that the economics drove their decision.
“We’ve always been disciplined, and at the price required to match Paramount Skydance’s latest offer, the deal is no longer financially attractive, so we are declining to match,” co-CEOs Ted Sarandos and Greg Peters said in a statement. “This transaction was always a ‘nice to have’ at the right price, not a ‘must have’ at any price,” the pair said.
A dramatic turnaround in the bidding war
The outcome marks a striking reversal in a deal process that initially appeared settled.
Warner had previously agreed to Netflix’s $72 billion deal focused on studios and HBO Max, leaving behind cable networks.
Paramount later launched a hostile takeover attempt directed at shareholders, proposing to acquire the entire company.
Paramount strengthened its bid with several concessions.
It agreed to cover Warner’s $2.8 billion breakup fee owed to Netflix, increased a termination fee to $7 billion if regulators blocked the deal, and accelerated a 25-cent-per-share “ticking fee” payable to shareholders each quarter the transaction remains pending.
The pursuit became a priority after Skydance Media gained control of Paramount last August.
Paramount had long been viewed as smaller than rivals such as Disney, Netflix, and Amazon, and sought scale through consolidation.
Warner chief executive David Zaslav endorsed the merger’s potential benefits, saying, “Once our Board votes to adopt the Paramount merger agreement, it will create tremendous value for our shareholders.”
WBD on Thursday posted a net loss of $252 million in its fourth quarter results while adding 3.5 million subscribers to its platforms.
Netflix’s withdrawal was welcomed by investors.
The company’s shares rose about 8.4% in after-hours trading after it stepped away, following months in which the stock had been pressured amid merger uncertainty.
WBD share price fell 1.74% while Paramount Skydance’s stock surged 6.17% in after market trading.
Regulatory scrutiny and political concerns
The acquisition still faces significant regulatory review.
US lawmakers had expressed concern about a Netflix-Warner combination dominating the streaming market, and the Justice Department had been examining potential anticompetitive behavior.
Paramount’s transaction will also attract scrutiny, particularly because it would combine two legacy studios and place CNN alongside CBS News.
Media advocacy groups have raised alarms.
Craig Aaron, co-CEO of Free Press, said in a WSJ report, “The idea that Paramount should be allowed to control CBS and CNN should be unthinkable.”
Paramount’s smaller streaming footprint compared with Netflix may reduce some competition concerns, but consolidation across film studios, television networks, and news divisions is likely to be examined closely.
Paramount expects $6 billion in synergies, though analysts question whether the financial returns justify the risks.
Financial risks and industry implications
Even if the deal closes, investors and analysts see challenges ahead.
Paramount must integrate a far larger studio library and television operations while managing debt and rising interest costs.
Warner itself struggled with borrowing following its prior merger with Discovery, and political opposition to cost-cutting could complicate the integration.
The transaction comes as the media industry adapts to shifting viewer habits and technological change.
Warner has recently shown operational improvement, with streaming profitability doubling at HBO Max and theatrical successes boosting its studio performance.
Meanwhile, Netflix may have avoided potential regulatory and financial burdens.
The company had attracted scrutiny from state attorneys general and federal authorities concerned about its market power in streaming.
With its withdrawal, those concerns may ease while Paramount assumes the regulatory spotlight.
The proposed merger represents a major structural shift in Hollywood.
If approved, Paramount would control an expanded portfolio of film franchises and television networks while attempting to compete more effectively with streaming giants.
The battle for scale in entertainment continues, but for now, the decisive victory belongs to Paramount Skydance.
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