A $111bn mega-merger is reshaping Hollywood's power map, and Netflix tapping out just handed Paramount Global the keys to Warner Bros. Discovery.
Netflix exits the Warner Bros. bidding war
Netflix exits the Warner Bros. bidding war
- Netflix pulled back after the revised price stopped making financial sense to its executives.
- Co-CEOs Ted Sarandos and Greg Peters framed it as a "nice to have" deal, not a must-win situation.
- Warner Bros. confirmed Netflix declined to push its offer any higher.
- Staying disciplined through the whole negotiation process was how the streaming giant explained its exit.
- Paramount Global's upgraded bid landed at $31 per share, bumped up from $30.
- A $7bn payout kicks in if the deal falls apart before closing.
- Paramount also agreed to cover a $2.8bn break-up fee that had been locked in with Netflix.
- Shareholders were pitched the proposal as delivering superior value with a faster path to closing.
- Warner Bros.' film studio, television assets, CNN, and HBO Max all come bundled in the takeover.
- Tech billionaire Larry Ellison and his son David Ellison are the money and leadership behind Paramount.
- Warner Bros. has already stamped Paramount's offer as "superior."
- Hollywood is bracing for restructuring and job cuts if the combined entity gets the green light.
- California Attorney General Rob Bonta flat-out said this merger is not a done deal.
- California's Department of Justice has an active investigation running on the proposed tie-up.
- Sign-off is still needed from both the US Department of Justice and European regulators.
- Political influence and media consolidation concerns are swirling loudly around CNN's future.