The final verdict from Warner Bros Discovery seems to be in: Netflix cash wins over Paramount debt. The company is leaning towards Netflix’s all-cash offer for its $83 billion studio and streaming assets, rejecting a higher but riskier hostile bid from Paramount Skydance.
Paramount’s $108.4 billion offer is burdened by significant debt, leading the WBD board to label it “inadequate.” Paramount is now attempting to replace the board to force the sale. Netflix’s all-cash proposal provides a clear, secure alternative that validates the board’s decision.
The deal includes WBD’s premium assets, such as HBO and the Warner Bros film studio. WBD’s linear networks, like CNN and the Cartoon Network, are excluded and will be spun off. This structure ensures that shareholders get paid without taking on the risks of the Paramount deal.
The merger faces significant political headwinds. US politicians are concerned that a Netflix-WBD giant would control nearly half of the streaming market. This regulatory scrutiny is the final hurdle to the deal’s official completion.
Investors have delivered their own verdict. WBD shares rose 1.6% on the news, signaling that the market agrees with the choice of Netflix. In the battle of the bids, the certainty of cash has proven to be the deciding factor.
