Warner Bros. Discovery Rejects Paramount’s $108B Bid, Backs Netflix Merger Instead
Key Highlights
- Warner Bros. Discovery unanimously rejected Paramount’s $108.4 billion hostile bid
- Board reaffirmed support for Netflix’s $82.7 billion merger
- Paramount bid would create the largest leveraged buyout in history
- Netflix praised for strong balance sheet and clear regulatory path
- Larry Ellison pledged $40B but did not increase the offer price
- Shareholders face a January 21 tender deadline
Introduction
Warner Bros. Discovery has drawn a firm line in the sand. The company’s board has unanimously rejected a $108.4 billion takeover bid from Paramount Skydance, instead backing its pending merger with Netflix. In communications to shareholders, Warner Bros. labeled Paramount’s proposal “illusory,” citing excessive leverage, execution risk, and uncertainty around deal completion.
The decision sets the stage for one of the most consequential media consolidation battles in modern entertainment history.
Why Warner Bros. Rejected Paramount’s $108B Offer
Despite being numerically larger than Netflix’s offer, Paramount’s bid was deemed fundamentally flawed by the Warner Bros. Discovery board.
According to a shareholder presentation, the deal would require:
- $87 billion in pro forma gross debt
- Nearly seven times Paramount’s market capitalization
- Over $50 billion in incremental borrowing
- Financing arrangements that could be amended or terminated at Paramount’s discretion
Warner Bros. warned that the proposal amounts to a “one-sided option” favoring Paramount Skydance, offering shareholders little certainty and long delays before receiving any cash.
Netflix Merger Seen as the Safer, Superior Path
In contrast, Warner Bros. strongly endorsed its agreement with Netflix, highlighting the streaming giant’s financial stability and execution certainty.
Netflix currently boasts:
- Approximately $400 billion market capitalization
- Investment-grade A/A3 credit rating
- Projected $12+ billion in free cash flow for 2026
The Netflix deal allows Warner Bros. to spin off its cable TV assets before closing, giving the company operational flexibility and reducing regulatory and financing risk.
Larry Ellison’s $40B Pledge Falls Short
Paramount’s bid was backed in part by Larry Ellison, who pledged a personal guarantee of $40.4 billion in equity financing. However, Warner Chairman Samuel Di Piazza Jr. said the pledge failed to address the core issue.
“Larry Ellison stepped up,” Di Piazza acknowledged, “but ultimately, he didn’t raise the price.”
Without a higher bid or cleaner financing structure, the Warner Bros. board concluded that Netflix remains the superior offer with a clearer path to closing.
Breakup Fees and Financial Risk Complicate the Picture
Walking away from the Netflix deal would cost Warner . a $2.8 billion termination fee. Additionally:
- Buyers would owe $5.8 billion if regulatory approval fails
- A failed Paramount deal could leave shareholders with $4.7 billion in unreimbursed costs
- Net effective termination cost could drop to $1.1 billion
Warner Bros. also warned that Paramount’s bid would block its planned separation of Discovery Global and Warner Bros., a move management believes will unlock long-term shareholder value.
Shareholder Pressure and Ongoing Uncertainty
Not all investors are aligned with the board’s position. Pentwater Capital Management, a major shareholder, has accused the board of failing its fiduciary duty by refusing to negotiate further with Paramount.
Pentwater has threatened to:
- Vote against the Netflix merger
- Oppose director reappointments
- Push for renewed talks if Paramount improves its offer
Despite this pressure, Warner Bros. maintains that Paramount has repeatedly failed to present a compelling, final proposal.
Regulatory Outlook and Timeline
Netflix confirmed it is actively engaging with regulators, including:
- The U.S. Department of Justice
- The European Commission
If approved, the Netflix–Warner merger is expected to close within 12 to 18 months, further cementing Netflix’s dominance in global streaming by absorbing HBO, Warner Studios, and other premium assets.
Conclusion
Warner Bros. Discovery’s rejection of Paramount’s $108 billion bid underscores a broader shift in the media industry: financial certainty and execution risk now matter more than headline valuation.
By backing Netflix, the company is betting on scale, balance-sheet strength, and regulatory clarity rather than leveraged ambition. Unless Paramount materially improves its offer, Netflix appears firmly positioned to reshape the global entertainment landscape.
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