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Paramount Skydance to fuse HBO Max and Paramount+ in $110 billion megadeal

Ellison vows reinvention, not retrenchment, as combined group eyes 200m subscribers and $69 billion revenue

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LOS ANGELES: Streaming’s latest land grab is colossal. Paramount Skydance Corp. will combine HBO Max and Paramount+ into a single platform after signing a $110 billion deal to acquire Warner Bros. Discovery Inc..

The transaction, formally inked on 27 February, is expected to close in the third quarter, subject to shareholder and regulatory approval. Paramount agreed to pay $31 per share in cash, fending off rival suitors including Netflix Inc..

On a conference call, chief executive officer David Ellison confirmed the streaming tie-up. HBO Max, with 131m subscribers, and Paramount+, with 79m, would be merged into one platform. Yet HBO, he stressed, would endure as a brand even after integration.

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“Across the two platforms, there are over 200 million D2C subscribers today in more than 100 countries and territories worldwide, positioning us to compete effectively with the leading streaming services in today’s marketplace,” Ellison said.

The pitch is scale with swagger. The combined entity expects to generate $69 billion in pro-forma revenue in 2026, with estimated earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation of $18 billion, according to chief financial officer Dennis Cinelli. Net debt is projected at $79 billion.

Ellison was emphatic that the strategy is expansionary. The group is targeting at least 30 theatrical releases annually across its studios and does not plan to cut production. “This is not about consolidation, it’s about reinventing the business,” he said.

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Sport will be central to that reinvention. Ellison highlighted rights to the National Football League, Ultimate Fighting Championship, March Madness, the PGA Tour and the Olympics in Europe. A previously signed $7.7 billion UFC deal offers flexibility to air events on Warner Bros.’ TNT network, he added.

The future of certain legacy investments remains murky. Warner Bros. Discovery holds less than 10 per cent of AEW, whose television rights deal for TBS, TNT and HBO Max runs through 2027, with an option to extend to 2028. It is unclear whether that stake would be divested or retained post-merger.

Paramount said it has no plans to spin off its cable networks. A shareholder vote is expected in the spring, chief operating officer Andy Gordon said.

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Funding the takeover is as muscular as the ambition. Paramount has secured $47 billion in equity backed by the Ellison family and RedBird Capital Partners, alongside $54 billion in borrowing from Bank of America, Citigroup and Apollo Global Management Inc..

Investors were cautious. Paramount shares slipped 1.9 per cent to $13.26 in morning trading in New York.

If regulators sign off, the deal will redraw the streaming map — welding together premium drama, blockbuster film, live sport and global distribution under one roof. In the battle for eyeballs, Paramount Skydance is betting that bigger is not just better, but unbeatable.

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Hollywood

David Zaslav could net up to $887m as Warner Bros Discovery sells up

Media mogul strikes gold as Paramount Skydance deal triggers massive windfall

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NEW YORK: While the average office worker might hope for a nice clock and a round of applause upon leaving, David Zaslav is looking at a slightly more substantial parting gift. The chief executive officer of Warner Bros Discovery is positioned to receive a windfall of up to $887 million following the company’s blockbuster $110 billion sale to Paramount Skydance.

In a twist of corporate fate that feels scripted for the big screen, the deal marks the finale of a high-stakes bidding war. It comes after Netflix, once the frontrunner, decided to exit stage left and abandon its pursuit of the HBO Max parent company.

While most people receive a standard final paycheck, the filing released on Monday suggests Zaslav’s exit package is built a little differently. If the deal closes as expected in the third quarter of 2026, the numbers break down like this:

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The cash out: A severance package of $34.2 million, covering his salary and bonuses.
The equity: $115.8 million in vested shares he already owns.
The future fortune: A massive $517.2 million in unvested share awards, essentially “future stock” that turns into real money the moment the ink dries on the merger.
Perhaps the most eye-catching figure is the $335 million earmarked for tax reimbursements. However, this particular pot of gold has an expiration date.

The company noted that these reimbursements are tied to specific tax-code rules that significantly decline as time passes. If the deal hits a snag and drags into 2027, that tax payout drops to zero. With hundreds of millions on the line, the chief executive officer likely has every incentive to ensure the closing process moves at double-speed.

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