Warner Bros. Discovery Activist Investor Calls Paramount Bid a ‘Once in a Lifetime’ Opportunity Amid Auction Frenzy

Warner Bros. Discovery Activist Investor Calls Paramount Bid a ‘Once in a Lifetime’ Opportunity Amid Auction Frenzy

Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD) has launched a formal auction process attracting bids from Paramount Skydance and Netflix, with an activist investor labeling the Paramount offer a rare chance for shareholders as shares trade below perceived deal values.[1][2]

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Auction Draws Multiple Suitors

WBD rejected three Paramount Skydance offers in recent months, the latest just under $24 per share, as management asserts the stock merits over $24 amid broader interest.[1][2] Paramount Skydance, led by David Ellison, emerged as a frontrunner, with reports of offers including co-CEO and co-chairman roles for WBD CEO David Zaslav.[1] Netflix holds an agreement for WBD’s studio and streaming assets valued at $82.7 billion, positioning it as a key contender in a potential bidding war.[3][4]

Bankers managing the process have confirmed unsolicited interest from several parties, fueling expectations of competitive premiums.[1][2] Singular Research upgraded WBD to “moderate buy,” while Wells Fargo raised its Paramount Skydance price target to $16 from $10, reflecting analyst optimism on **M&A premiums in media consolidation**.[1][2]

Regulatory and Labor Headwinds Mount

The Writers Guild of America vowed to oppose a Paramount-WBD merger, calling it a “disaster” and citing labor risks that could complicate approvals.[1][2] The Trump administration’s DOJ antitrust division, now leaderless after Gail Slater’s departure, reviews both Netflix’s $82.7 billion bid and Paramount Skydance’s proposal amid internal power struggles.[4]

Slater’s exit, amid reports of lobbyist influence on cases like Live Nation and HPE-Juniper, introduces uncertainty for **cross-border M&A trends 2026** and high-profile media deals.[4] Deputy Assistant Attorney General Omeed Assefi assumes acting leadership, as companies deploy Trump-connected lobbyists to sway outcomes.[4]

Financial Terms and Strategic Rationale

Bidder Reported Offer Details Implied Value Status
Paramount Skydance Three offers rejected; latest <$24/share; Zaslav co-CEO role Front-runner per analysts Rejected; auction ongoing[1][2]
Netflix Studio/streaming assets agreement $82.7 billion Under DOJ review[3][4]

Paramount Skydance reluctance to exceed $25 per share underscores valuation debates in **private equity exit strategies in media** and streaming, where synergies from content libraries drive bids despite linear TV declines.[1][2] WBD’s HBO Max price hikes aim to boost ARPU, supporting margins ahead of a sale.[1]

Industry Implications for Media M&A

This auction signals accelerated **media M&A trends 2026**, with bidders eyeing scale against cord-cutting and ad market shifts. Historical parallels include Disney-Fox, where premiums exceeded 20%, though union opposition echoes SAG-AFTRA hurdles in prior deals.[1][4] For C-level executives tracking **strategic M&A in entertainment**, the outcome will benchmark regulatory tolerance under Trump DOJ and bidder willingness to navigate labor friction.

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Shareholder gains hinge on bidding war dynamics, with WBD stock reacting to takeover speculation despite governance concerns over CEO payouts.[1]

Sources

 

https://www.marketbeat.com/stocks/NASDAQ/WBD/news/, https://www.marketbeat.com/stocks/NASDAQ/PSKY/news/, https://www.aol.com/articles/netflixs-growth-strategy-more-just-172200920.html, https://gvwire.com/2026/02/13/trumps-doj/

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