Paramount's $108 billion offer to force Netflix out turns the battle for Warner Bros. into a showdown

Cal Jeffrey

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Not so fast: Just when Netflix thought it had Warner Bros. in the bag, Paramount Skydance CEO David Ellison stepped in and said, "Wait a minute." The legendary production company re-entered the fray with a bid $18 billion higher than Netflix's. Ellison says regulators are more likely to approve Paramount's acquisition than the streaming giant's.

Paramount Skydance has opened a new front in the fight for Warner Bros. Discovery, launching a hostile bid directly to shareholders. The move escalates a months-long contest for control of one of Hollywood's most valuable media portfolios. It comes just days after Netflix agreed to acquire the studio's film, television, and streaming businesses for $82.7 billion.

Paramount is offering shareholders an all-cash, $30-per-share deal that values Warner Bros. Discovery at $108.4 billion. The bid matches the proposal the WBD board rejected last week and is backed by equity from the Ellison family and RedBird Capital, along with $54 billion in debt financing from major banks. Early trading reflected the renewed battle: Paramount shares rose, Warner Bros. Discovery climbed, and Netflix fell.

Paramount Skydance CEO David Ellison said the company submitted multiple bids before WBD's formal sale process widened the field, signaling his frustration with how the auction unfolded and the board's silence after Paramount raised its latest offer.

"We're really here to finish what we started," Ellison told CNBC.

Netflix's deal covers WB's film and television studios, HBO/HBO Max, and related content and licensing businesses, and values each share at $27.75. The legacy linear networks – WBD's Global Networks assets – fall outside the deal and will spin off into a separate public company.

Paramount, by contrast, proposes a bid for the entire company, including those cable and broadcast businesses. Ellison argued that this distinction makes his proposal more attractive, adding that Paramount offers nearly $18 billion more cash than Netflix. He also suggested Paramount could outbid its current offer.

A central point of contention is the fate of WBD's cable networks, which WBD plans to spin off as a separate company called Discovery Global in 2026. Ellison said he values the linear assets at $1 per share, a figure far below WBD's internal estimate. The gap underscores broader disagreements over how much traditional television businesses are worth in a streaming-first market.

Regulatory strategy has become another pressure point. Ellison said Paramount's smaller scale would allow for quicker approval and pointed to a favorable relationship with the Trump administration, which he characterized as supportive of expanded competition. He argued that letting the top streaming service absorb the No. 3 player would be anticompetitive and face heavier scrutiny than a merger between Paramount and WBD.

Netflix has already agreed to significant breakup penalties if regulators block its deal, while WBD faces its own fee if it opts for another buyer. Those terms add more weight to shareholder sentiment – the exact audience Ellison is now trying to sway as he attempts to redirect a sale that seemed settled only days ago.

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All posturing… this is simply part of high-level negotiations… call me when a deal is done :)
 
I suspect the current CEO wants a cushy job after the acquisition is done, too, with all that cash and leading the linear content side, rather than being out of a job post acquisition, hence another reason the execs prefer to split the company rather than sell the whole thing.
 
So let me get this straight. A company with a market capitalization of $15.6B (Paramount) is trying to pull the rug out from under a company worth $411B (Netflix) for one worth many time their own value (WB = ~$67B = 4.3X Paramount)?

Is this a joke? I have $15 but I'm going to offer $108 for a $67 item. The math doesn't math. Watch Netflix just buy both of them.
 
And when it is all said and done, your streaming subscription prices will go down....NOT!
Let them. I lost interest in streaming as their content degraded tremendously. Let them raise the prices
and then if people are not stupid, they will look for other ways to spend their free time.
 
This could spell the end of Paramount as an entity if they acquired Warner Bros. Netflix might then end up acquiring both for the existing WB offer 🤣 As for the FTC approval, hey.. hey here's a few hundred million, now go shut the fu#$ up! It may not be the same style of acquisition, but when AMD acquired ATI their market cap was at least bigger than ATIs.

On another note this acquisition may not be beneficial at all at a time streaming services are far too expensive. When there were fewer streaming services and pricing was reasonable, pirated content was in the rear view mirror - it's now once again taking every seat in your car. People are fed up with floating catalogues and exorbitant prices!
 
This could spell the end of Paramount as an entity if they acquired Warner Bros. Netflix might then end up acquiring both for the existing WB offer 🤣 As for the FTC approval, hey.. hey here's a few hundred million, now go shut the fu#$ up! It may not be the same style of acquisition, but when AMD acquired ATI their market cap was at least bigger than ATIs.

On another note this acquisition may not be beneficial at all at a time streaming services are far too expensive. When there were fewer streaming services and pricing was reasonable, pirated content was in the rear view mirror - it's now once again taking every seat in your car. People are fed up with floating catalogues and exorbitant prices!

Doesn't help that physical media is on the back burner and slowly sizzling out.....

Even when streaming services were far fewer and lower priced, I still went for physical media because it made more sense to have physical copies over being reliant on some streaming service to have what I want to watch. And even then you weren't, just as you are today, likely to find what you want to watch on any streaming service because IPs and distribution rights can become foggy overtime.

I haven't pirated anything for nearly 30 years now and I don't plan on doing so again ever. I will spend my money on physical media so I can do with it as I please. If these studios aren't releasing their streaming material on physical media, some third party is pirating and ripping them on physical media and that's who will get my money. I'd rather it go to the studios, but if they don't believe the cost of physical media is worthwhile, then they just don't get my money because I'm not giving it to them to stream anymore. Since I dropped Netflix with their last price hike that was it for my money going to a streaming service. I spend my time watching things on my server that I know I enjoy or I eventually find something free to watch on free streaming channels and just suffer through commercials....just like the good old TV broadcasting days.
 
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Doesn't help that physical media is on the back burner and slowly sizzling out.....

Even when streaming services were far fewer and lower priced, I still went for physical media because it made more sense to have physical copies over being reliant on some streaming service to have what I want to watch. And even then you weren't, just as you are today, likely to find what you want to watch on any streaming service because IPs and distribution rights can become foggy overtime.

I haven't pirated anything for nearly 30 years now and I don't plan on doing so again ever. I will spend my money on physical media so I can do what it as I please. If these studios aren't releasing their streaming material on physical media, some third party is pirating and ripping them on physical media and that's who will get my money. I'd rather it go to the studios, but if they don't believe the cost of physical media is worthwhile, then they just don't get my money because I'm giving it to them to stream anymore. Since I dropped Netflix with their last price hike that was it for my money going to a streaming service. I spend my time watching things on my server that I know I enjoy or I eventually find something free to watch on free streaming channels and just suffer through commercials....just like the good old TV broadcasting days.
Meh, I just use Stremio.
 
As of December 2025, Netflix has a market cap of 424 billion dollars and Paramount has a market cap of 7 billion dollars. Paramount is going to pay 108 billion for company that has a market cap of only 67 billion, a recipe for disaster. They will go down the rabbit hole of debt which they'll never recover from. What's surprising is Netflix is number #1 in the streaming space but has no movie franchises of their own. So how come people gravitate to Netflix then?

Paramount keeps a lot of their proprietary movie franchises and series under their own roof, not allowing to be shown on Netflix. You would think then that Paramount would have the upper hand. So can see why Netflix wants Warner Brothers.
 
The headline writer apparently has no idea what the difference is between an extrapolated valuation of a company and an offer to buy that company.
 
As of December 2025, Netflix has a market cap of 424 billion dollars and Paramount has a market cap of 7 billion dollars. Paramount is going to pay 108 billion for company that has a market cap of only 67 billion, a recipe for disaster. They will go down the rabbit hole of debt which they'll never recover from. What's surprising is Netflix is number #1 in the streaming space but has no movie franchises of their own. So how come people gravitate to Netflix then?

Paramount keeps a lot of their proprietary movie franchises and series under their own roof, not allowing to be shown on Netflix. You would think then that Paramount would have the upper hand. So can see why Netflix wants Warner Brothers.
market cap =! income or cash on hand.

Both Netflix and Paramount will have to go into significant debt to buy WB. At the original price Netflix would need $74.4 billion in loans.
 
Doesn't help that physical media is on the back burner and slowly sizzling out.....

Welcome to the wonderful world of digital technology where you won't own anything! Your granted a limited license. Unfortunately that's the end game for entertainment including games. You can thank Sony, Oracle and their minions - Blu Ray started it all, and fu#$ed it up for everyone.
 
However, Paramount’s announcement notably overlooks the regulatory hurdles expected to come from trying to combine two of the biggest Hollywood film studios as well as two large news corporations, CNN and CBS News.

There's a reason for that:
https://www.axios.com/2025/12/08/jared-kushner-paramount-warner-bros-netflix

Affinity Partners, the private equity firm led by Jared Kushner, is part of Paramount's hostile takeover bid for Warner Bros Discovery, according to a regulatory filing.

Yes more Trump corruption on full show here when you also add in the Saudi Arabia Public Investment Fund as being involved.
 
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