Paramount Extends Warner Bros. Discovery Tender Offer Deadline to Feb. 20
Paramount Skydance has issued a second extension on its $30 per share tender offer for Warner Bros. Discovery.
The offer, which was set to expire on Wednesday at 5 p.m. ET, will now be extended to Feb. 20. The latest extension comes after the deadline was pushed from Jan. 8 to Jan. 21 in December.
The $108.4 billion bid is backed by Oracle co-founder Larry Ellison’s irrevocable personal guarantee towards $40.4 billion of the equity financing, and $55 billion in debt financing from Bank of America, Citigroup and Apollo Global Management. Its other equity partners include RedBird Capital Partners and three Middle Eastern sovereign wealth funds.
As of Wednesday, 168,511,695 shares have been validly tendered and not withdrawn, though shareholders can do so at any time before the deadline. WBD has a total of 2.48 billion outstanding shares.
In a letter to shareholders, Paramount CEO David Ellison reiterated that his offer is “significantly greater and far more certain” and said that WBD was “rushing to solicit shareholder approval” on the Netflix deal. He added that the consideration paid to shareholders in the Netflix transaction falls “well short” of Paramount’s $30 per share offer.
In addition to the extension, Ellison has filed materials to solicit WBD shareholders to vote against Netflix’s revised, $83 billion all-cash deal.
Shareholders are expected to vote on the Netflix deal by April. However, a threshold of just 20% of WBD shareholders who have held the stock for at least a year would be needed to call a special meeting before then.
Netflix’s revised deal for Warner’s studio and streaming assets continues to be valued at $27.75 per share, with WBD shareholders also expected to benefit from the cable network spinoff Discovery Global in the next six to nine months.
Warner Bros. said in additional disclosures released on Tuesday that it believes the spinoff could be worth up to $6.86 per share. Discovery Global is expected to have $17 billion in debt as of June 30, 2026, which will decrease to $16.1 billion by the end of 2026, per the new disclosure.
Paramount, which sued to obtain additional disclosure around how the Netflix deal and Discovery Global were valued, has previously argued that the latter is worth between nothing and 50 cents. The company tried to expedite the proceedings of that lawsuit, but a judge dismissed its motion, ruling that it failed to demonstrate it would suffer irreparable harm. The ruling was based on the company’s standing and did not pertain to the merits of its claim.
In Thursday’s letter and proxy filing, Paramount took aim at WBD’s projections for Discovery Global, arguing the board’s own analyses peg its equity value as low as 72 cents per share.
The media giant warned that if some or all of Discovery Global’s debt needs to be allocated back to Warner Bros.’ streaming and studios business, the Netflix deal’s consideration for shareholders could be reduced.
If leveraged in line with Comcast cable network spinoff Versant, Paramount said Discovery Global would only be able to support roughly $5.1 billion in debt and that $11.9 billion would be transferred reducing the cash per share from Netflix to WBD shareholders to roughly $23.20.
“Despite the fact that the capital structure of Discovery Global will directly determine the actual amount WBD shareholders receive in the Netflix
transaction, and WBD will be required to disclose such information as well as full financial information about Discovery Global at the time of the separation, WBD plans to solicit shareholder approval for the Netflix transaction without this information,” Paramount said. “This is even more extraordinary given that the WBD Board uses claims about the value of the Discovery Global equity as a basis for asserting the transaction delivers more than Paramount’s $30 per share all-cash offer.”
Both Paramount and Netflix are currently engaging with regulators, including the Department of Justice and European Commission. The DOJ’s Antitrust Division has issued second requests for information on both Netflix’s deal and Paramount’s tender offer.
Netflix expects a deal to close within 12 to 18 months from when the deal was first announced, while Paramount has said a potential deal would close within a year.
If Warner Bros. abandons the deal with Netflix, it would be required to pay the streamer a $2.8 billion termination fee. If the deal is blocked by regulators, Netflix would pay WBD a $5.8 billion breakup fee.
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