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$108 Billion Isn’t Enough: Warner Bros. Shareholders Push Back

Anderson Liam
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The bidding battle for Warner Bros. Discovery is evolving into a credibility contest rather than a simple price war. In NewsTrackerToday, the revised $108.4 billion hostile proposal from Paramount Skydance underscores how financing structure and deal certainty now matter as much as headline valuation – and for some shareholders, still more.

A key WBD investor, Harris Oakmark, has made clear that Paramount’s latest revisions do not yet clear that bar. Despite adjustments designed to strengthen funding, the fund views the updated bid as insufficient compensation for switching away from an already-endorsed alternative. In our assessment, this reflects a broader reality of late-stage M&A: once a board signals preference, any rival bidder must pay not only for assets, but for disruption and delay.

Paramount’s most notable concession was the introduction of a personal $40.4 billion guarantee from Larry Ellison, aimed squarely at dispelling doubts around financing reliability. For Isabella Moretti, this move is less about generosity and more about risk compression. She views the guarantee as an attempt to convert a complex, trust-heavy structure into something investors can underwrite with confidence, especially in a transaction likely to face intense regulatory scrutiny.

Still, the absence of an increase to the $30-per-share offer has left some holders unconvinced. Harris Oakmark’s stance highlights an important inflection point: when two competing offers are viewed as economically similar, the burden shifts to incentives. In NewsTrackerToday’s view, that means either a higher premium or additional protections that materially improve downside outcomes if the deal fails.

Paramount also raised its regulatory breakup fee to $5.8 billion, matching terms in the competing bid from Netflix, and extended the tender deadline to January 21. These changes improve symmetry between the offers, but they do not alter the core trade-off investors face: higher nominal value versus higher certainty. Liam Anderson, who focuses on deal financing and market risk, notes that in capital-intensive media mergers, probability-weighted outcomes often trump headline price, particularly when antitrust risk is non-trivial.

That calculus helps explain why Warner Bros. Discovery’s board has publicly favored Netflix’s lower all-in valuation. Although Netflix’s cash component comes in below Paramount’s, its structure – combining cash, equity participation and a clearer path to closing – has been framed as more dependable. In NewsTrackerToday’s reading, this is a bet that strategic fit and execution certainty will ultimately deliver more value than a higher but shakier bid.

The shareholder base complicates matters further. Large institutional investors such as Vanguard, BlackRock and State Street hold significant stakes across Warner Bros. Discovery, Paramount and Netflix, creating incentives to prioritize systemic stability over winner-takes-all outcomes. For these holders, the question is not which studio “wins,” but which transaction maximizes value without triggering prolonged regulatory drag.

From here, News Tracker Today expects pressure to intensify on Paramount to sweeten terms if it intends to remain competitive. Without a clearer premium or additional safeguards, the revised bid risks stalling despite its strengthened financing. At the same time, the presence of an active rival keeps the door open to further escalation. The decisive factor in the coming weeks will not be rhetoric, but which offer convinces shareholders that certainty – not ambition – is being priced correctly.

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