Marketdash

Paramount Crashes Netflix's Warner Bros. Party With $108 Billion All-Cash Counteroffer

MarketDash Editorial Team
7 hours ago
Paramount Skydance is challenging Netflix's Warner Bros. acquisition with an all-cash tender offer of $30 per share, valuing the media giant at $108.4 billion and promising over $6 billion in cost synergies while accusing Warner Bros. of running a biased sale process.

Paramount Skydance Corp (PSKY) isn't ready to watch from the sidelines. On Monday, the company threw down a $108.4 billion all-cash gauntlet for Warner Bros. Discovery, Inc (WBD), offering $30 per share in a direct challenge to Netflix Inc.'s (NFLX) pending acquisition. Both stocks jumped on the news, setting up what could be one of Hollywood's most dramatic bidding wars.

The move is designed to give Warner Bros. shareholders what Paramount characterizes as a faster, more certain, and frankly better deal than Netflix's mixed cash-and-stock proposal. That Netflix offer, valued at $82.7 billion and priced at $27.75 per share, comes with the usual regulatory uncertainty and stock market risk that make shareholders nervous.

Building a Hollywood Powerhouse

Paramount's pitch is straightforward: combine two legacy Hollywood studios into a scaled entertainment leader that can actually compete in the streaming era. The company says it plans to invest in creative talent, keep supporting theatrical releases (a notable promise given the industry's pivot to streaming), and expand direct-to-consumer offerings.

The financial case rests on massive cost synergies. Paramount is promising more than $6 billion in savings, along with what it describes as enhanced competition and significant growth potential. That's a bigger synergy number than Netflix's projected $2-3 billion in annual cost savings by year three.

There's one wrinkle worth noting: Paramount held $3.26 billion in cash and equivalents as of September 30, 2025. That's obviously well short of the $108.4 billion price tag, which means this all-cash offer will require some creative financing.

Why Paramount Is Going Directly to Shareholders

Here's where things get spicy. Paramount is bypassing Warner Bros.' board entirely with this tender offer, taking the proposal directly to shareholders. The reason? Warner Bros.' board has already rejected Paramount's prior proposals without much explanation.

CEO David Ellison isn't mincing words about what he thinks is happening. In a CNBC interview, he said flatly: "There is an inherent bias against us." He emphasized that Paramount designed its deal to be "pro-consumer, pro-talent, and pro-competition," while Warner Bros. "gave us no response to our offer."

Ellison also raised antitrust concerns about Netflix's bid, arguing that "allowing number 1 and number 3 streamer to combine is anti-competitive." That's a regulatory argument that could gain traction in Washington, where scrutiny of big tech and media consolidation remains intense.

Paramount has gone so far as to urge Warner Bros. to review the sale process through an independent committee, citing conflict-of-interest concerns about how the bidding battle has been managed.

Netflix Isn't Backing Down

Despite Paramount's aggressive counteroffer, Netflix is pressing ahead with its acquisition. The streaming giant is betting that regulatory approval, not rival bidders, will ultimately decide the deal's fate.

Netflix's agreement, announced last Friday, gives it control of Warner Bros.' film and TV studios plus the HBO and HBO Max streaming businesses. Notably, Warner Bros. will spin off its Global Networks segment in 2026 before the deal closes.

The Netflix proposal maintains Warner Bros.' theatrical distribution strategy, a key concern for filmmakers and theater chains alike. Netflix projects the acquisition will boost GAAP earnings per share by year two, with those $2-3 billion in annual savings kicking in by year three.

Both companies' boards have approved the Netflix deal, which now needs regulatory and shareholder sign-off. That approval process could take months, giving Paramount's competing offer time to gain traction with shareholders looking for a better price.

Market Reaction

Investors are processing two competing visions for Warner Bros.' future. On Monday, WBD stock traded 6.52% higher at $27.78, suggesting shareholders are pleased to have competing bidders. PSKY gained 3.40% as investors digested its bold move. Meanwhile, NFLX dropped 3.01%, facing questions about whether its deal will survive Paramount's challenge.

The tender offer sets up a fascinating test: Will Warner Bros. shareholders take Paramount's higher all-cash bid, or stick with Netflix's lower but perhaps more executable mixed offer? And will regulators view a Netflix-Warner Bros. combination differently than a Paramount-Warner Bros. merger? The answers will reshape Hollywood's competitive landscape for years to come.

Paramount Crashes Netflix's Warner Bros. Party With $108 Billion All-Cash Counteroffer

MarketDash Editorial Team
7 hours ago
Paramount Skydance is challenging Netflix's Warner Bros. acquisition with an all-cash tender offer of $30 per share, valuing the media giant at $108.4 billion and promising over $6 billion in cost synergies while accusing Warner Bros. of running a biased sale process.

Paramount Skydance Corp (PSKY) isn't ready to watch from the sidelines. On Monday, the company threw down a $108.4 billion all-cash gauntlet for Warner Bros. Discovery, Inc (WBD), offering $30 per share in a direct challenge to Netflix Inc.'s (NFLX) pending acquisition. Both stocks jumped on the news, setting up what could be one of Hollywood's most dramatic bidding wars.

The move is designed to give Warner Bros. shareholders what Paramount characterizes as a faster, more certain, and frankly better deal than Netflix's mixed cash-and-stock proposal. That Netflix offer, valued at $82.7 billion and priced at $27.75 per share, comes with the usual regulatory uncertainty and stock market risk that make shareholders nervous.

Building a Hollywood Powerhouse

Paramount's pitch is straightforward: combine two legacy Hollywood studios into a scaled entertainment leader that can actually compete in the streaming era. The company says it plans to invest in creative talent, keep supporting theatrical releases (a notable promise given the industry's pivot to streaming), and expand direct-to-consumer offerings.

The financial case rests on massive cost synergies. Paramount is promising more than $6 billion in savings, along with what it describes as enhanced competition and significant growth potential. That's a bigger synergy number than Netflix's projected $2-3 billion in annual cost savings by year three.

There's one wrinkle worth noting: Paramount held $3.26 billion in cash and equivalents as of September 30, 2025. That's obviously well short of the $108.4 billion price tag, which means this all-cash offer will require some creative financing.

Why Paramount Is Going Directly to Shareholders

Here's where things get spicy. Paramount is bypassing Warner Bros.' board entirely with this tender offer, taking the proposal directly to shareholders. The reason? Warner Bros.' board has already rejected Paramount's prior proposals without much explanation.

CEO David Ellison isn't mincing words about what he thinks is happening. In a CNBC interview, he said flatly: "There is an inherent bias against us." He emphasized that Paramount designed its deal to be "pro-consumer, pro-talent, and pro-competition," while Warner Bros. "gave us no response to our offer."

Ellison also raised antitrust concerns about Netflix's bid, arguing that "allowing number 1 and number 3 streamer to combine is anti-competitive." That's a regulatory argument that could gain traction in Washington, where scrutiny of big tech and media consolidation remains intense.

Paramount has gone so far as to urge Warner Bros. to review the sale process through an independent committee, citing conflict-of-interest concerns about how the bidding battle has been managed.

Netflix Isn't Backing Down

Despite Paramount's aggressive counteroffer, Netflix is pressing ahead with its acquisition. The streaming giant is betting that regulatory approval, not rival bidders, will ultimately decide the deal's fate.

Netflix's agreement, announced last Friday, gives it control of Warner Bros.' film and TV studios plus the HBO and HBO Max streaming businesses. Notably, Warner Bros. will spin off its Global Networks segment in 2026 before the deal closes.

The Netflix proposal maintains Warner Bros.' theatrical distribution strategy, a key concern for filmmakers and theater chains alike. Netflix projects the acquisition will boost GAAP earnings per share by year two, with those $2-3 billion in annual savings kicking in by year three.

Both companies' boards have approved the Netflix deal, which now needs regulatory and shareholder sign-off. That approval process could take months, giving Paramount's competing offer time to gain traction with shareholders looking for a better price.

Market Reaction

Investors are processing two competing visions for Warner Bros.' future. On Monday, WBD stock traded 6.52% higher at $27.78, suggesting shareholders are pleased to have competing bidders. PSKY gained 3.40% as investors digested its bold move. Meanwhile, NFLX dropped 3.01%, facing questions about whether its deal will survive Paramount's challenge.

The tender offer sets up a fascinating test: Will Warner Bros. shareholders take Paramount's higher all-cash bid, or stick with Netflix's lower but perhaps more executable mixed offer? And will regulators view a Netflix-Warner Bros. combination differently than a Paramount-Warner Bros. merger? The answers will reshape Hollywood's competitive landscape for years to come.