Paramount Skydance Corporation (PSKY) traded at $15.68 at the close, reflecting steady investor attention as the company entered one of the most consequential bidding battles in modern media history.
Paramount Skydance Corporation Class B Common Stock, PSKY
Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD) has officially received preliminary buyout offers from Paramount Skydance, Comcast, and Netflix, according to sources familiar with the matter. These early bids could determine the fate of iconic assets such as HBO, Warner Bros. Pictures, CNN, and the DC Comics franchise. No earnings date was included in the source information.
WBD’s board set a Thursday deadline for offers, triggering three sharply different proposals:
Paramount Skydance submitted a bid for the entire company, including WBD’s cable networks. With ownership of Paramount Pictures, Paramount+, CBS, and major cable brands, the company aims to unite two of Hollywood’s most powerful studios under one umbrella.
Netflix proposed acquiring only WBD’s streaming and studio assets, a move that would give the giant its first major film and TV production infrastructure, complementing its global subscriber base.
Comcast, owner of Universal Pictures and NBCUniversal, pursued the same partial acquisition strategy, focusing on WBD’s content engines rather than its cable properties. Comcast is preparing to spin off its own cable network group into a separate publicly traded entity next year.
The streaming market is fiercely competitive, and scale impacts profitability, content budgets, and global reach. WBD owns top-performing assets such as HBO Max and 2025’s leading movie studio, Warner Bros. Pictures. Opportunities to acquire such a portfolio are extremely rare.
Before these talks, WBD’s stock had struggled in a difficult environment for legacy media companies. The firm also explored the option of splitting its studio and streaming units from its cable division, a move some board members believe would unlock more shareholder value.
Paramount would need significant funding to close a full-company deal. A previous $23.50 per-share offer in October highlighted its willingness to pay a premium, but WBD’s board seeks closer to $30 per share. Rumors suggest Paramount may tap Middle Eastern sovereign wealth funds to support its bid.
Comcast would rely on debt but has strong credit support. Netflix faces no major financing constraints given its $449 billion market valuation.
Regulatory concerns exist for each bidder, yet WBD attorneys believe none present insurmountable obstacles. Historical precedent, such as the DOJ losing its challenge to AT&T’s takeover of Time Warner, adds weight to that view.
WBD aims to decide by year-end whether to accept one of the takeover offers or continue with its planned corporate split, potentially triggering one of the largest entertainment mergers in decades.
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