In mega-cap M&A, being the market underdog can actually be your biggest strategic asset.
While Paramount Skydance’s massive $110 billion acquisition of Warner Bros Discovery (WBD) has sparked fierce regulatory scrutiny in the U.S. (particularly in California), the pathway through Europe is looking surprisingly clear. Sources indicate Paramount expects to easily secure European Union antitrust approval, highlighting a fascinating dynamic in the global streaming wars.
📊 THE MARKET SHARE MATH: Why did Netflix face an uphill regulatory battle while Paramount is breezing through Brussels? It comes down to regional footprint.
- The 20% Threshold: A combined Paramount and Warner Bros controls less than 20% of the market across all European territories.
- The Regulatory Benchmark: European Commission antitrust regulators typically only take a tough, interventionist line when a merged entity’s market share hits 30% or more.
“I think Paramount is something we could accept. It is a concentration in the production of films. There is no risk of a digital champion taking over the video streaming market.” — Andreas Schwab, European Parliament Lawmaker
🌍 THE SOVEREIGN WEALTH FACTOR (FSR): While traditional antitrust looks clear, the deal triggers a relatively new regulatory hurdle. The acquisition requires approval under the EU’s Foreign Subsidies Regulation (FSR), which targets unfair foreign state aid. This is required because Paramount’s bid is heavily bankrolled by Middle Eastern sovereign wealth:
- Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund (PIF)
- Abu Dhabi’s L’imad Holding Company
- The Qatar Investment Authority (QIA)
✂️ THE DIVESTMENT STRATEGY: Paramount isn’t leaving anything to chance. To guarantee unconditional approval, the company has already signaled a willingness to proactively divest minor overlapping assets, specifically targeting children’s television networks where Paramount’s Nickelodeon overlaps with Warner Bros’ Cartoon Network.
💡 ANALYST TAKEAWAY: This situation perfectly illustrates the fragmented nature of global M&A regulation. What California views as a potential “antitrust disaster” for Hollywood labor and domestic consolidation, the European Union views as a perfectly acceptable concentration of film production that doesn’t threaten its digital streaming ecosystem. Paramount CEO David Ellison’s aggressive early charm offensive in Europe—meeting directly with French President Emmanuel Macron and top EU merger officials—is paying massive dividends, allowing the company to isolate its toughest regulatory battles to the domestic front.
👇 Antitrust & M&A Professionals: Do you expect the EU’s new Foreign Subsidies Regulation (FSR) to become a major roadblock for media mega-mergers backed by sovereign wealth, or is it mostly a procedural governance check?
