Hollywood’s consolidation wave just hit a new peak: Paramount Skydance has agreed to acquire Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD) in a $110 billion deal, closing the door on a months-long bidding fight that also pulled in Netflix.
The headline isn’t only the price tag. It’s what the combination represents: a new media giant built to survive a streaming era that has been steadily draining audiences (and profits) from traditional TV.
The deal terms in plain English
- Enterprise value: $110 billion
- Equity value: about $81 billion
- Offer price: $31 per share
- Expected close: Q3 2026 (subject to shareholder and regulatory approval)
- Shareholder vote: expected in early spring 2026
Netflix had an agreement to buy WBD’s studio and streaming assets for $27.75 per share—and had a window to match Paramount’s superior offer. It declined to match, effectively ending the bidding war.
What Paramount is buying: a franchise superstore plus two major news networks
This merger creates a content and distribution powerhouse combining major studios and networks—including CNN and CBS—with a deep library and globally recognizable IP.
The combined company says it will control a film library of 15,000+ titles and franchises such as:
- Harry Potter (and associated universe titles)
- Game of Thrones
- Mission: Impossible
- DC Universe properties
It also commits to releasing at least 30 theatrical films per year—a signal aimed squarely at theaters and talent worried that mega-streaming economics could starve the big-screen pipeline.
How it’s being financed
Paramount Skydance’s funding plan is built on massive equity support and heavyweight debt commitments:
- $47 billion in equity from the Ellison family and RedBird Capital Partners
- $54 billion in debt commitments from Bank of America, Citigroup, and Apollo
- A rights offering of up to $3.25 billion of Class B stock for existing Paramount shareholders
Translation: this isn’t a “creative deal.” It’s an infrastructure-scale bet, financed like one.
Cost cuts and “synergies”: the first real test
The companies project more than $6 billion in savings, mainly through technology integration, corporate efficiencies, and operational streamlining.
That’s the part Wall Street likes—and the part employees fear. In big media mergers, “synergies” often mean layoffs, consolidation of overlapping teams, and a tougher environment for smaller projects that don’t fit the new company’s strategic priorities.
Netflix still gets paid—then walks away
Even though Netflix didn’t win, it didn’t leave empty-handed. Paramount paid the $2.80 billion termination fee that WBD owed Netflix under their prior agreement.
Strategically, Netflix also forced the final price higher—making the winning deal more expensive and potentially more leveraged for its rivals.
Regulators are already circling
This deal will be reviewed hard.
- California Attorney General Rob Bonta has said California is already investigating and will be “vigorous” in its review.
- In Europe, the expectation is that antitrust approval will likely be manageable, with any divestments relatively minor.
In the U.S., the central question will be competition: fewer major studios and fewer major platforms can mean reduced choice, pricing power, and less leverage for creatives and distributors.
Why this merger is happening now
Streaming has rewritten the economics of entertainment. The old model—fat cable bundles funding prestige content—keeps weakening. Even the biggest players are searching for scale, cost control, and libraries powerful enough to keep subscribers paying.
This deal is a bet that scale + franchises + distribution beats fragmentation.
What to watch next
- Regulatory timelines and conditions (this can reshape the deal’s real cost)
- Integration plan (especially around news networks and streaming strategy)
- Debt load and credit market reaction
- Talent and guild response (writers and creatives often fight consolidation)
- Theatrical strategy (30 films/year pledge: how real will it be?)
Bottom line
Paramount Skydance just landed one of the biggest media deals in modern Hollywood, ending Netflix’s bid and setting up a new content colossus. Now the hard part begins: proving that a mega-merger can actually produce stronger storytelling, better economics, and sustainable growth—without hollowing out the creative engine that made these studios valuable in the first place.


