In Hollywood dealmaking, sometimes the best acquisition is the one you don’t make.
The months-long battle for Warner Bros Discovery has officially concluded. Netflix (NFLX) has bowed out of the bidding war, allowing David Ellison’s Paramount Skydance to acquire the historic studio and its streaming assets in a massive $110 billion megadeal.
The market’s reaction? A massive applause for corporate restraint. Netflix shares surged nearly 14% following the announcement.
💰 THE DEAL METRICS:
- The Valuation: Paramount’s $110 billion acquisition represents roughly 13x Warner Bros’ estimated EBITDA for the year (notably higher than Paramount’s own 7x valuation).
- The Breakup Fee: Because WBD accepted a superior $31-per-share offer, Paramount was forced to pay the $2.8 billion termination fee that Warner Bros owed Netflix.
- The Market Reaction: In a rare M&A dynamic, both sides rallied. Netflix jumped 14% as investors cheered the avoided debt, while Paramount surged nearly 21% as investors priced in the sheer scale of the new media empire.
⚖️ THE STRATEGIC DIVERGENCE:
“What you want from a management team is an ability to look at acquisitions, value them, pay what they think is a fair price, but to not overpay.” — Ben Barringer, Quilter Cheviot
- For Netflix: This is a definitive “tick in the box” for capital discipline. By walking away from a deal it deemed “no longer financially attractive,” Netflix avoids a messy, multi-year merger integration and intense regulatory scrutiny, allowing it to refocus entirely on organic growth—all while pocketing a $2.8 billion fee.
- For Paramount: The streaming laggard is playing aggressive catch-up. By combining HBO Max and Discovery+ with its own platform, and acquiring crown-jewel IP like Harry Potter and The Matrix, Paramount is betting that sheer scale can finally break Netflix’s dominance.
💡 ANALYST TAKEAWAY: This is a defining moment for the streaming wars. Netflix has proven it will not abandon its “build-versus-buy” discipline just to block a competitor. Meanwhile, Paramount is absorbing massive debt to build a legacy media behemoth. The pressure is now entirely on David Ellison to prove that this $110 billion outlay—and the resulting regulatory and integration headaches—actually translates into streaming profitability rather than just Hollywood empire-building.
👇 M&A & Media Professionals: Do you view Netflix walking away as a strategic masterstroke, or will they eventually regret letting Paramount acquire the HBO and Warner Bros IP libraries?
