After months of binge-worthy gamesmanship, a victor has emerged in the saga to buy Warner Bros Discovery. On February 26th Netflix, the world’s biggest streaming company, bowed out of the competition, putting the legacy media giant on a path to merge with Paramount Skydance, controlled by David Ellison and his father Larry, the world’s sixth-richest man. Now, however, comes the hard part.
Should the deal be consummated, it will create a colossus that includes streaming networks HBO Max and Paramount+, news channels CBS and CNN, and the rights to film franchises from “Harry Potter” to “Transformers”. What would have been a nice addition for Netflix—which coveted Warner’s catalogue and its ability to churn out Oscar-nominated content—is existential for Paramount, notes Robert Fishman of MoffettNathanson, a firm of analysts. On its own, Paramount lacks the scale to survive the streaming wars; with Warner, it stands a much better chance. The combined company will have around 210m streaming subscribers—still far fewer than Netflix, which boasts some 325m, but more than other competitors such as Disney.
