Paramount + WBD bet $110B on theaters, bundles, and scale
Paramount and Warner Bros. Discovery boards approved a $110 billion merger, with the companies outlining plans for theatrical-first releases (minimum 45-day global window before PVOD, with many titles targeted for 60–90+ days before streaming) and continued third-party licensing. The combined company would unite Paramount+, HBO Max/Discovery+, and Pluto TV, alongside a 15,000+ title film library, major TV franchises, and broad live sports rights, while targeting over $6 billion in synergies including consolidation of streaming technology stacks. The deal is structured as Paramount paying $31 per share for WBD, backed by $47 billion in equity and $54 billion in debt commitments, with a targeted close in Q3 2026 subject to approvals.
Key Takeaways
- Deal terms: Paramount pays $31/share for WBD, backed by $47B equity and $54B debt commitments; target close Q3 2026 pending approvals.
- Release strategy: minimum 30 theatrical films/year; global 45-day theatrical window before PVOD, with many titles held 60–90+ days before streaming.
- Streaming footprint consolidation: Paramount+, HBO Max/Discovery+, and Pluto TV combined—plus plans to consolidate streaming technology stacks and ERP systems.
- Content economics: commitment to continued third-party licensing (and buying) alongside owning a massive franchise slate and broad live sports rights.
- Financial posture: $6B+ synergy target and intent to return to investment-grade credit metrics within three years of closing.
Why It Matters
This is a blueprint for the next phase of streaming: fewer “apps,” more mega-portfolios, and distribution optionality. By pushing theatrical windows back out, Paramount-WBD is signaling that streaming isn’t the automatic first stop for premium films—and that maximizing PVOD and box office is back in fashion. Meanwhile, the willingness to keep licensing externally suggests a pragmatic pivot away from walled-garden purity toward cash-flow optimization. The real battleground is operational: if $6B+ in synergies hinges on stack consolidation, product/tech integration becomes a P&L event—not an IT project.
Read full article at thewrap.com