Paramount goes hostile-ish: $30 cash bid for Warner Bros. Discovery
Paramount (a Skydance Corporation) announced it has commenced an all-cash tender offer to acquire all outstanding shares of Warner Bros. Discovery for $30 per share, valuing the transaction at an enterprise value of $108.4 billion and including WBD's Global Networks segment. The company said the offer is fully financed via new equity backstopped by the Ellison Family and RedBird Capital and $54 billion of debt commitments, and it plans to pursue antitrust clearance, contrasting its proposal with a recently announced Netflix-WBD transaction that it characterizes as more complex and higher regulatory risk. Paramount stated the combination would unite Paramount+ and HBO Max and create a larger direct-to-consumer footprint alongside studios, sports rights, and linear networks.
Key Takeaways
- Terms: $30.00/share all-cash tender offer for 100% of WBD (including Global Networks), implying $108.4B enterprise value.
- Financing: no financing condition; equity backstopped by Ellison family/RedBird and $54B of committed debt from Bank of America, Citi, and Apollo.
- Process: Paramount is taking the offer directly to shareholders; tender scheduled to expire Jan. 8, 2026 (unless extended).
- Strategic thesis: combine Paramount+ and HBO Max to build a scaled DTC footprint alongside studios, sports rights, and linear networks.
- Regulatory framing: Paramount argues its deal is more pro-competitive than a Netflix–WBD tie-up and expects faster antitrust clearance.
Why It Matters
This is the “all-cash vs. complex structure” meme coming for streaming M&A: buyers are betting certainty beats cleverness when regulators and markets are jittery. If Paramount can credibly finance $54B of new debt and still promise $6B+ in synergies, it pressures every mid-scale streamer to pick a lane—merge for scale, specialize, or get priced as runoff. A Paramount+–Max combo would reshape bundling, ad sales, and sports/windowing strategy overnight, while forcing competitors (Disney, Amazon, Netflix) to respond to a newly consolidated studio + DTC + linear cash-flow machine.
Read full article at ir.paramount.com