Key takeaways
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- Paramount Skydance raised its bid for Warner Bros. to $31/share, prompting Warner Bros. to say it may be better than its existing $27.75/share agreement with Netflix.
- Warner Bros. hasn’t declared Paramount’s offer “superior” yet, but will enter additional talks; if it flips, Netflix gets four business days to respond.
- Paramount added buyer-friendly terms: a ticking fee (25¢ per share per quarter after Sept. 30 pending approval) and a $7B reverse termination fee if regulators block the deal.
- The fight is fundamentally about control of premium IP (DC, HBO franchise library) as legacy cable economics deteriorate.
What Happened?
Warner Bros. said a revised Paramount Skydance offer of $31 per share could lead to a better outcome than its current agreement with Netflix to buy Warner’s studio and HBO operations at $27.75 per share. Warner isn’t withdrawing its recommendation for the Netflix deal yet, but stated the new Paramount terms meet the threshold for further engagement.
Warner plans more talks with Paramount. If the board ultimately deems Paramount’s proposal superior, Netflix would have four business days to counter.
Why It Matters?
This is a valuation and certainty trade-off for shareholders.
Paramount’s higher headline price is paired with structural sweeteners designed to address “deal certainty” concerns: the ticking fee compensates investors for time-to-close risk, while the $7B breakup payment attempts to de-risk regulatory outcomes. Paramount also signals it won’t use ongoing deterioration in Warner’s cable networks as a reason to renegotiate—important because that’s the volatile asset in the mix.
For Netflix, losing Warner’s studio/HBO assets would be strategically meaningful: it would forgo a rare chance to lock in a massive content engine and long-lived IP at scale. That raises the probability of a counterbid or improved terms, which could re-rate expectations for what top-tier content libraries are worth in a consolidating media landscape.
What’s Next?
Warner’s board discussions with Paramount are the near-term catalyst. If Warner leans toward Paramount, watch for Netflix’s response window and whether it raises price, improves structure, or adds protections to preserve its deal.
Beyond the bid itself, expect heightened focus on: regulatory risk, financing durability, and how each bidder plans to manage (or separate) declining cable assets while monetizing premium IP in a streaming-first world.















