Paramount’s streaming grows, but TV slide keeps losses piling up
Paramount reported Q4 results showing streaming revenue up 10% year-on-year to $2.2bn, with Paramount+ revenue up 17% to $1.8bn and subscribers rising 4% to 78.9m, while overall the company posted a $339m operating loss amid continued TV segment declines. Executives provided limited commentary on Paramount’s ongoing pursuit of a full acquisition of Warner Bros Discovery (WBD), as WBD continues to recommend Netflix’s offer for its streaming and studios business and prepares for a shareholder vote on 20 March. Paramount’s TV segment revenue fell 5% to $4.7bn, including a 10% drop in advertising revenue, and shares fell 2.2% on the day.
Key Takeaways
- Streaming momentum continued: streaming revenue +10% YoY to $2.2B; Paramount+ revenue +17% to $1.8B; subs reached 78.9M (+4%).
- Legacy TV weakened: TV segment revenue fell 5% to $4.7B, driven by a 10% advertising drop and 7% distribution decline.
- Profitability remains the pressure point: total revenue was $8.1B (slightly below expectations) with a $339M operating loss.
- Guidance signals softness: Q1 revenue outlook of $7.15B–$7.35B sits below Wall Street’s ~$7.39B consensus.
- M&A overhang persists: Paramount confirmed talks with WBD’s board are ongoing but provided no detail; the market reacted with shares down 2.2%.
Why It Matters
This is the new streaming-era P&L: DTC can grow and still fail to offset the speed of linear decline. Paramount’s numbers show the core risk for every hybrid media company—ads and affiliate fees deteriorate faster than streaming scales to profitability. That’s why the WBD bidding war matters: consolidation is increasingly pitched as an “accelerant,” not a nice-to-have. With Netflix reportedly doing regulatory outreach, the meme is clear: in 2026, distribution power and deal-making are becoming as strategic as content.
Read full article at broadcastnow.co.uk