Warner Bros. Discovery briefcase sits atop the tower, symbolizing a major deal, near luxury car and cityscape at dusk.

Netflix Slams Rivals With $72B Cash Bid

Netflix has converted its $72 billion offer for Warner Bros. Discovery into an all-cash deal, sharpening its battle with Paramount Skydance for control of the legendary studio.

At a Glance

  • Netflix revised its offer to $72 billion in cash
  • Warner Bros. shareholders still receive $27.75 per share plus Discovery Global stock
  • Boards of both companies approved the new structure
  • Why it matters: The move speeds up a shareholder vote and blocks Paramount’s hostile takeover

The streaming giant initially proposed a cash-and-stock package worth $27.75 per Warner Bros. share, carrying an enterprise value of $82.7 billion including debt. Tuesday’s switch to pure cash keeps the headline price unchanged while stripping away equity risk for Warner Bros. investors.

Netflix and Warner Bros. said the revision:

  • Simplifies the transaction
  • Provides more certainty of value
  • Accelerates the path to a shareholder vote

Paramount’s Hostile Push

Paramount Skydance has refused to back down. Last week the rival bidder took another step in its hostile pursuit, vowing to nominate its own slate of directors before Warner’s next shareholder meeting.

Warner leadership has repeatedly rejected Paramount’s overtures and urged investors to support Netflix. Earlier this month the board declared Paramount’s offer “not in the best interests of the company or its shareholders.”

Paramount sweetened its bid late last month with:

  • An irrevocable personal guarantee from Oracle founder Larry Ellison-father of Paramount CEO David Ellison-covering $40.4 billion in equity financing
  • A $5.8 billion payout to shareholders if regulators kill the deal, matching Netflix’s breakup fee

What Each Suitor Wants

The fight grows complex because Netflix and Paramount seek different assets:

Bidder Assets Sought Post-Deal Structure
Netflix Studio + streaming only (HBO Max, TV/film production) News & cable networks spun off
Paramount Entire company-including CNN, Discovery, all networks No spin-off planned

In a letter to shareholders, Warner blasted Paramount’s proposal as “essentially a leveraged buyout” loaded with debt and operating restrictions that could “hamper WBD’s ability to perform” during regulatory review.

Union Opposition

SAG-AFTRA and the Writers Guild of America both issued statements opposing the Paramount deal, though the unions did not object to Netflix’s offer.

Regulatory Hurdles Ahead

Either transaction would:

  • Take more than a year to close
  • Face intense antitrust scrutiny
  • Trigger a Justice Department review that could end in a lawsuit or mandated changes
  • Invite challenges from overseas regulators

Politics may also play a role. President Donald Trump has made unprecedented public remarks about potential personal involvement in deciding whether a deal proceeds.

Market Reaction

Netflix shares rose 1.3% in pre-market trading after the cash-deal announcement. Warner Bros. Discovery stock slipped slightly.

The revised pact sets the stage for a shareholder vote that could reshape Hollywood’s landscape-either by handing Warner’s prized studio and streaming assets to Netflix or forcing the company to fend off Paramount’s aggressive bid for the entire conglomerate.

Author

  • I’m Daniel J. Whitman, a weather and environmental journalist based in Philadelphia. I

    Daniel J. Whitman is a city government reporter for News of Philadelphia, covering budgets, council legislation, and the everyday impacts of policy decisions. A Temple journalism grad, he’s known for data-driven investigations that turn spreadsheets into accountability reporting.

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