Fox to acquire Roku for $22B to dominate free streaming
Fox plans to acquire Roku for $22 billion to combine The Roku Channel and Tubi, aiming to boost its ad-tech and CTV business through Roku's first-party data and programmatic ad tech capabilities. Separately, the Department of Justice approved Paramount Skydance's $110 billion acquisition of Warner Bros. Discovery, pending international regulatory approval.
Key Takeaways
- Fox will acquire Roku for $160 per share in a cash-and-stock transaction valued at $22 billion
- The combined viewership of Tubi (2.2%) and The Roku Channel (3%) rivals Disney+ at 5.3% of U.S. streaming
- CEO Lachlan Murdoch confirmed there are no immediate plans to merge the two FAST platforms
- The acquisition gives Fox control over the CTV operating system and home screen distribution for 100 million households
Why It Matters
This acquisition moves Fox beyond content and into the infrastructure layer of streaming. By owning the hardware and operating system, Fox secures "gatekeeper" status, mirroring moves by tech giants like Amazon. The deal specifically addresses the fragmentation of the FAST market, creating a combined entity that ranks as the third-largest player in U.S. television viewership. For the broader ecosystem, this signals a shift from platform-agnostic content strategies to a "full-stack" model where distribution and first-party data ownership are paramount. Watch for regulatory feedback regarding Fox's potential to favor its own services on the Roku home screen.
Additional Context
The Fox-Roku deal arrives as 2026 becomes a pivotal year for media consolidation. Per The Guardian (June 2026), the Department of Justice recently approved Paramount Skydance’s $111 billion acquisition of Warner Bros. Discovery. That merger, which combines assets like Max, Paramount+, and CNN, significantly narrows the field of major independent studios and intensifies the pressure on remaining players to achieve massive scale. While the DOJ found the Paramount-WBD deal "pro-competitive," it face ongoing scrutiny from state attorneys general and international regulators in the UK and EU. In the CTV hardware market, Fox is entering a highly competitive landscape where Roku leads but faces mounting pressure. Per Marketing Dive (June 2026), Roku currently holds a 25% share of the U.S. connected TV platform market, narrowly leading Samsung at 23%. Analysts at MoffettNathanson suggest that Fox's ownership might challenge Roku's historical reputation as a neutral "front door" to streaming. This shift occurs as major streamers like Disney and Netflix have fully integrated ad-supported tiers, with Disney completing its takeover of Hulu in early 2025 to create a unified app experience, according to CBS News (June 2026). Financially, the pivot to platform-based revenue is critical. According to Forbes (June 2026), Roku's platform business—comprised of advertising and subscriptions—generated over $1.1 billion in Q1 2026, while its hardware business operated at a negative gross margin. For Fox, which reported $6.5 billion in annual ad revenue, the acquisition is expected to double its CTV-specific ad business. The transaction is structured so that Fox shareholders will own approximately 73% of the combined entity upon completion in 2027.
Read full article at cynopsis.com
