With Netflix declining to match Paramount’s latest offer for Warner Bros, Paramount will subsidise the $2.8bn termination fee paid to Netflix by Warner Bros. Matt Britzman, senior equity analyst, Hargreaves Lansdown, has shared his thoughts.
โThe streaming takeover saga took a dramatic turn after Warner Bros. Discovery formally recognised Paramount Skydanceโs offer as the superior bid, prompting Netflix to walk away almost immediately. After weeks of drama, meetings and speculation, Netflixโs decision to step aside brought an abrupt end to what had been one of the marketโs most closely watched corporate chess matches. In the end, it underlined just how fast things can move when big money, regulators and strategic pride collide.
For Netflix investors, the reaction has been positive with shares 8.5% higher in after-hours trading. While there was clearly scope for Netflix to push higher, management chose discipline over empireโbuilding, removing a major acquisition overhang that had been weighing on the shares. The bid always looked like a mix of offence and defence โ shoring up content and scale, while keeping competition from gaining any edge, but at a very high price โ and with that risk now off the table, investors are free to refocus on Netflixโs core strengths: pricing power, margins and execution. For now, at least, the market seems to be pricing this as a win for everyone.โ





