Warner Bros. Discovery has confirmed it is reviewing an increased takeover proposal from Paramount Skydance, though the company has not disclosed the revised price or the specific terms it requested as part of what was described as a “best and final” effort to compete with Netflix’s $83 billion agreement.
Paramount previously offered $30 per share in cash. Analysts expect the updated bid to fall somewhere in the $32 to $35 range, which would represent billions in additional equity value. Even without the exact figure, the message is unmistakable: David Ellison is still leaning in.
That persistence is shaping this contest in real time.
This Has Moved Into a Pressure Phase
Ellison hasn’t treated this like a symbolic challenge. He raised the offer. He addressed financing certainty. He signaled readiness to pursue a proxy fight if necessary.
That kind of follow-through changes the dynamics.
Warner Bros. Discovery isn’t a side asset. It’s studio scale, premium IP, global distribution infrastructure and a library that still carries leverage across theatrical, linear and streaming services. Ownership would immediately reposition Paramount’s competitive standing.
Ellison is approaching it as a defining swing.
Regulatory Time Carries Weight
The Netflix transaction is moving through regulatory review as the Department of Justice gathers industry input. Political visibility around the deal has increased. Greater scrutiny tends to expand timelines, and extended timelines influence shareholder math.
Review duration affects integration planning, capital allocation and executive focus. Investors start assigning probability weight to completion scenarios.
Paramount’s pitch centers on execution clarity. Higher price. Defined financing. Active engagement.
Boards evaluate both valuation and certainty. The path that feels more executable often carries additional gravity.
Netflix’s Response Signals Strategic Appetite
Netflix retains the contractual advantage and the balance sheet strength to respond. The company has long positioned itself as a disciplined acquirer.
Warner Bros. Discovery would expand Netflix well beyond a streamlined streaming service model. It would add linear networks, cable assets and a traditional studio operation to a company optimized for digital scale.
Absorbing that footprint requires appetite for integration complexity and regulatory endurance. The response to Paramount’s increased bid will indicate how central this asset is to Netflix’s long-term architecture.
Persistence Builds Credibility
Ellison has repeatedly, over and over again, made clear this acquisition matters.
Each revised proposal reinforces seriousness. Sustained engagement builds credibility with shareholders and increases the pressure on the board to fully evaluate the alternative.
A transaction of this size would reshape Paramount’s scale and elevate Ellison’s position within the industry’s power structure. His posture reflects that ambition.
The Streaming Wars Take
Paramount has escalated and shown it’s willing to stretch. Netflix holds the structural advantage and the financial capacity to respond. The board’s decision will hinge on valuation, regulatory durability and long-term strategic alignment.
Ellison has repeatedly, over and over again, made clear this acquisition matters.
Now the market waits to see how far Netflix is prepared to go.
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