Paramount Skydance yesterday extended the deadline on its hostile tender offer for Warner Bros Discovery by about a month to February 20, buying more time to persuade investors that its bid for the Hollywood studio trumps a rival deal with Netflix.
The company did not raise its bid on Thursday (January 22) from what it had pledged earlier.
A successful deal, according to a Reuters report, will change the landscape of Hollywood by giving the suitor ownership of iconic franchises from ‘Friends’ to ‘Batman’ as well as the HBO Max streaming service.
Netflix on Tuesday (Jan. 20) revised its $82.7 billion offer to go all-cash in hopes of expediting the deal closure and providing greater financial certainty to investors worried about its previous stock-and-cash deal.
It is now willing to pay $27.75 per share in cash for the streaming and studio assets of the David Zaslav-led company, an offer that was unanimously approved by the Warner Bros board.
Paramount has launched a charm offensive and sued Warner Bros to bring the HBO owner to the negotiating table. But Warner Bros and analysts have suggested Paramount needs to raise its offer of $108.4 billion, or $30 per share, for the whole company to restart deal talks.
Vaishnaw: Creator economy offers citizens a democratic platform
Prime Video, HBO Max executives to headline Series Mania Forum
GTC Network gives Punjabi twist to Legends League Cricket
India–England T20 WC semi-final sets global streaming record on JioHotstar
Meta pushes back against Karnataka SM ban for kids under 16
‘XO, Kitty’ S3 trailer released, Lana Condor returns as Lara Jean
BCCI awards T20 WC-winning Indian team $14.24mn cash bonus
TRAI issues new audit manual for digital TV distribution systems
Jeff Daniels joins Apple TV’s ‘The Morning Show’ S5
125,000+ creators monetising content via Amazon India influencer plan 

