Fox acquires Roku for $22B to dominate the streaming home screen
Fox Corporation has agreed to acquire Roku in a $22 billion cash-and-stock deal. This acquisition aims to combine Fox's content, including Tubi, with Roku's streaming platform and advertising technology, creating a major streaming and TV platform in the US. The companies expect the transaction to enhance Fox's position in connected TV and advertising, with Fox shareholders owning approximately 73% of the combined company.
Key Takeaways
- Fox shareholders will own 73% of the combined company, with Roku investors holding 27% following the $160-per-share payout.
- The acquisition integrates Roku’s first-party data and ACR technology with Fox’s ad-supported ecosystem, including the Tubi and Fox One services.
- Management expects $400 million in annual cost synergies and projects the deal to be accretive to free cash flow by the second full year.
- The combined entity will control two of the largest FAST services, The Roku Channel and Tubi, which currently have only a 33% audience overlap.
Why It Matters
This deal shifts Fox from a content supplier to a dual-threat platform owner, mirroring the vertical integration of rivals like Amazon and Google. By owning the 'front door' to the living room, Fox gains proprietary Automatic Content Recognition (ACR) data and programmatic ad tech that traditional broadcasters typically lack. This infrastructure allows Fox to prioritize its own sports and news discovery while monetizing third-party app traffic via the Roku Exchange. For the broader ecosystem, it signals a definitive move toward 'full-stack' ownership where controlling distribution is as critical as owning the IP. Watch for how Fox maintains Roku’s 'neutral platform' status while leveraging the interface to boost its standalone Fox One subscription service.
Additional Context
The acquisition arrives as the U.S. streaming market enters a period of aggressive consolidation. Per CBS News (June 2026), the Department of Justice recently cleared the $110 billion Paramount-Skydance merger with Warner Bros. Discovery, creating a competitor with over 200 million subscribers. These mega-deals reflect a strategic pivot by legacy media to achieve the scale necessary to compete with Netflix and YouTube, the latter of which remains the dominant long-form video platform globally. Technically, the deal secures Fox a massive programmatic advertising engine. According to Digiday (June 2026), Roku’s programmatic business is approximately twice the size of Fox’s, with third-party spend on Roku’s inventory growing 40% year-over-year in Q1 2026. This technical integration is designed to offset the 24% decline in Fox’s traditional advertising revenues reported in fiscal Q3 2026. By capturing Roku’s 32% share of the open programmatic CTV market (per MediaPost, February 2026), Fox gains a high-margin digital revenue stream to balance its cyclical broadcast assets. Financial analysts note that Fox is funding the cash portion with $12 billion in committed bridge financing from Morgan Stanley, according to Fox's investor disclosure. While the deal is expected to close in the first half of 2027, internal friction may arise regarding Roku's open ecosystem. Forrester (June 2026) suggests that while Fox intends to keep Roku 'partner-friendly,' the incentive to favor Fox News and NFL broadcasts on the Roku home screen could alienate third-party streaming partners who rely on Roku for neutral discovery.
Read full article at csimagazine.com
