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Home » Warner Bros. Discovery rejects Paramount Skydance’s latest takeover bid

Warner Bros. Discovery rejects Paramount Skydance’s latest takeover bid

By News RoomJanuary 7, 2026No Comments5 Mins Read
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Warner Bros. Discovery rejects Paramount Skydance’s latest takeover bid
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Warner Bros. Discovery rejected the latest takeover bid from Paramount Skydance — the latter’s seventh straight overture — citing uncertainties around the debt financing tied to the offer as WBD continued to tout its merger deal with Netflix.

In a Wednesday statement, the owner of Warner Bros., HBO and CNN claimed that Paramount Skydance — run by David Ellison and his mega billionaire father Larry Ellison — is attempting to launch “the largest LBO in history,” with so much debt tied to their $78 billion, all-cash offer that they may not be able to complete the deal.

Instead, the company’s board instead unanimously recommended that investors approve the board’s agreement to accept streaming giant Netflix’s $72 billion, $27.75-a-share bid for its Warner Bros. studio and HBO Max streaming service.

David Zaslav is the CEO of Warner Bros. Discovery — which rejected the latest takeover bid from Paramount Skydance.

“They’re not listening to us — they still haven’t agreed to what Netflix has and won’t pay the breakup fee — and where is the higher price?” a senior official executive at WBD told The Post. “Plus we need certainty of closing. Will the banks really give them all that debt and will their bankers get them the money?”

The cash-and-stock Netflix deal, combined with an estimated $3 a share generated from a separate sale of the company’s cable properties — known as Discovery Global — remains superior to what the Ellisons are proposing, WBD’s board argued.

The WBD official added: “Larry has only guaranteed the equity if he guarantees the debt — boom, it’s yours. Could you imagine if they don’t come up with the money on a declining business with cord cutting? Shareholders will say you had a deal with Netflix … what did you guys do?”

Typically, LBOs are generally defined as debt-financed takeovers of companies by private-equity firms, whereas the Paramount Skydance deal is a publicly traded company and would be considered a strategic merger in banker parlance.

Nevertheless, WBD doubled down on the LBO rhetoric.

“The extraordinary amount of debt financing in the PSKY offer…the transaction PSKY is proposing is in effect a leveraged buyout,” WBD chairman Samuel A. Di Piazza said in a statement. “In fact it would be the largest LBO in history with $87 billion of total pro forma gross debt.”

Paramount Skydance is rub by CEO David Ellison.

The latest twist in the deal saga puts pressure on Paramount Skydance to possibly increase its offer beyond $30 a share in cash — or, as The Post has reported, opt for what is known internally as the “Defcon 1” strategy.

That could include suing WBD for allegedly ignoring what it believes is a more shareholder friendly deal and imposing a rigged deal process that favored Netflix from the start because of the friendship of WBD CEO David Zaslav and Netflix chief Ted Sarandos.

WBD in its various responses to Paramount Skydance has denied such accusations.

Netflix CEO Ted Sarandos and Zaslav are friends.

As reported by The Post, famed value investor Mario Gabelli, who’s financial company GAMCO Investors holds WBD stock, is siding with the Ellisons in their now hostile attempt to convince shareholders to reject Netflix and sign up with their offer.

The first deadline of their tender is Jan. 21.

Paramount, meanwhile, could also walk away from the process, begun in September when David Ellison made a $19-a-share cash-and-stock offer for WBD, and hope the regulatory challenges of the Netflix deal prevents the closing. Its transaction combines the No. 1 and No. 3 streaming services and is sure to get review from the DOJ’s antitrust department.

The Ellisons with their partners at RedBird Capital have been arguing that Netflix’s cash-stock deal is mired in uncertainties including, as The Post reported, significant value from the cable-spin off of CNN, TNT and the Discovery Network.

They say this week’s poor showing of Comcast’s spinoff of its cable properties, CNBC, MS NOW and other stations, which has far less debt, is proof the value of the deal could push the over payout to shareholders far lower than its $30 a share bid.

The Ellisons and RedBird recently sweetened their offer for the company, including a personal guarantee by Larry Ellison, the Oracle co-founder worth approximately $240 billion to make good on its bid. WBD, however, in its latest response to the Ellisons, said the latest volley failed to address cost concerns with its deal including billions of fees that would be incurred to complete the Netflix transaction.

Larry and David Ellison, along with their partners at RedBird Capital, have argued that Netflix’s cash-stock deal is mired in uncertainties.

It also doubled down on its contention that the cable-properties spin out means “WBD shareholders will receive value through their ownership of Discovery Global which will have considerable scale, a diverse global footprint and leading sports and news assets.”

So-called LBOs have are acquisitions that are financed by high levels of debt made popular during the 1980s buyout craze but have received criticism from investors because the of the pressure it puts on the new company to make bondholder payments while growing the business.

LBOs were cited a reason for so many of the companies caught up in the craze failed during those years, though its was used by many the eras best financiers, including CNN founder Ted Turner in his various media acquisitions. 

WBD is the holding company for cable properties like CNN, Discovery, TNT but also the top ranked Warner Studio and HBO Max streaming service.

Business David Ellison david zaslav Larry Ellison Media mergers & acquisitions Netflix Paramount+ Skydance warner bros discovery
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