Warner Bros weighs reopening sale talks with Paramount, Bloomberg News reports

Feb 15 (Reuters) – Warner Bros Discovery (WBD) is considering reopening sale talks with rival Hollywood studio Paramount Skydance (PSKY) after receiving its โ€Œhostile suitor’s most recent amended offer, Bloomberg News reported on โ€ŒSunday, citing people with knowledge of the matter. Members of Warner Bros’ board are discussing โ€‹whether Paramount could offer the path to…


Warner Bros weighs reopening sale talks with Paramount, Bloomberg News reports
Warner Bros weighs reopening sale talks with Paramount, Bloomberg News reports

Feb 15 (Reuters) – Warner Bros Discovery (WBD) is considering reopening sale talks with rival Hollywood studio Paramount Skydance (PSKY) after receiving its โ€Œhostile suitor’s most recent amended offer, Bloomberg News reported on โ€ŒSunday, citing people with knowledge of the matter.

Members of Warner Bros’ board are discussing โ€‹whether Paramount could offer the path to a superior deal, the Bloomberg report said, adding that the board has not decided how to respond and may stick to the current deal with Netflix (NFLX) .

Reuters could not immediately โ€Œverify the report. Paramount, Warner โ Bros and Netflix did not respond to requests for comment.

Paramount had enhanced its Warner Bros bid last week โ by offering shareholders extra cash for each quarter the deal fails to close after this year. It also agreed to cover the breakup fee โ€‹the HBO โ€‹parent would owe Netflix if it โ€‹walked away, even though the โ€ŒCBS owner did not raise its per-share offer.

Paramount said it has offered shareholders a 25-cent-per-share quarterly “ticking fee” (about $650 million) in cash starting in 2027 until closing and agreed to cover Warner Brosโ€™ $2.8 billion breakup fee to Netflix. However, it did not raise its $30-per-share offer, valuing the deal at $108.4 โ€Œbillion including debt.

Both Netflix and Paramount covet โ€‹Warner Bros for its leading film and โ€‹television studios, extensive content โ€‹library and major franchises such as “Game of Thrones,” “Harry Potter” โ€Œand DC Comics superheroes Batman and โ€‹Superman.

Activist investor Ancora โ€‹Holdings, which has built a nearly $200 million stake, last week said it plans to oppose the Netflix deal, arguing the board โ€‹did not sufficiently engage โ€Œwith Paramount over its rival bid, which includes cable assets โ€‹like CNN and TNT.

(Reporting by Chandni Shah in Bengaluru; Editing โ€‹by Chris Reese and Matthew Lewis)

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