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Paramount Letter to Warner Bros. Discovery Making Case for Its Bid

David Ellison, the CEO of Paramount Skydance who has launched a hostile takeover bid for Warner Bros. Discovery, is urging WBD shareholders to tender their shares and “register their view with the WBD board of directors that they prefer the superior Paramount transaction,” the company said.

Paramount sent a letter from Ellison Wednesday addressed to WBD shareholders (read the full text below). According to Paramount, the letter “clearly sets out why Paramount’s $30.00 per share all-cash offer to acquire all of WBD is superior to WBD’s transaction with Netflix.”

“We funded, founded and then merged Skydance with Paramount and know the sacrifices and investment it takes to capitalize and grow a media business,” Ellison wrote in the letter. “I am passionate and dedicated to this pursuit, committed to putting my own money in, and that is why I am writing to you today.”

SEE ALSO: How Netflix’s WB Megadeal Stunned Hollywood — and Sparked a Fight From David Ellison

Among other points, Ellison’s letter to WBD shareholders reiterates Paramount’s claim that the Netflix deal with Warner Bros. Discovery undervalues WB’s TV networks. According to Paramount’s estimates, the WBD networks group (which the company plans to spin off as Discovery Global) has a value of $1 per share, whereas the WBD board’s rejection of Paramount’s $30/share offer for the entire company implies WBD is valuing the global networks business at at least $2.25/share.

On Monday, Ellison’s Paramount Skydance launched a direct-to-shareholders hostile takeover effort for WBD, with its most recent bid carrying an enterprise value of $108.4 billion. That came after Netflix and Warner Bros. Discovery on Dec. 5 announced an $83.7 billion agreement, under which the streamer would buy WB’s studios, HBO, HBO Max and games divisions.

Warner Bros. Discovery said Monday that its board will “carefully” review the Paramount offer and issue a recommendation within 10 business days (as required by law). WBD’s review of the Paramount bid is a formality, as Paramount already had submitted the $30/share bid on Dec. 4 to the board.

The next step would be a higher per-share offer from Paramount Skydance in the coming days. Ellison noted that Paramount had communicated to WBD’s representatives that the $30/share proposal was not Paramount’s “best and final” offer.

SEE ALSO: David Ellison Courted Warner Bros. Discovery’s Zaslav Hard Over 12 Weeks to Win a Deal. Then WBD’s Chief Stopped Responding to His Texts

Earlier Wednesday, two Democratic lawmakers — U.S. Reps. Sam Liccardo (D-Calif.) and Ayanna Pressley (D-Mass.) — sent a letter to WBD CEO David Zaslav expressing “serious national security concerns” over Paramount Skydance‘s hostile takeover bid for Warner Bros. Discovery because the Paramount bid is backed by the sovereign wealth funds of Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Abu Dhabi. According to Paramount, the three Arab wealth funds “have agreed to forgo any governance rights — including board representation,” which the company asserts means it does not need a review by CFIUS, interagency government entity tasked with oversight of foreign investment in U.S. companies.

Here is the full text of Ellison’s letter, which pointed WBD shareholders to Paramount’s website with information about its hostile takeover bid (strongerhollywood.com) including an FAQ for investors.:

Dear Warner Bros. Discovery Shareholder:

Paramount began pursuing Warner Bros. Discovery (“WBD”) because we, along with our partner RedBird Capital, believe we are the best stewards not only to build long-term value for the asset but also delight audiences and help cultivate a more vibrant creative community.

We funded, founded and then merged Skydance with Paramount and know the sacrifices and investment it takes to capitalize and grow a media business. I am passionate and dedicated to this pursuit, committed to putting my own money in, and that is why I am writing to you today.

Over the past 12 weeks, Paramount presented six proposals to the WBD Board of Directors and management to acquire all of WBD. On Monday, we launched a $30.00 per share all-cash tender offer to present our superior transaction to you directly.

Our tender offer documents filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission include the complete bid package we submitted to the WBD Board of Directors on December 4. We want you to see firsthand what Paramount proposed and what we, along with our equity and debt financing partners, were prepared to execute on that very day.

Our public offer – identical to the terms we presented to WBD privately – delivers superior value and a faster, more certain path to completion than the transaction announced with Netflix. IT IS NOT TOO LATE TO REALIZE THE BENEFITS OF PARAMOUNT’S PROPOSAL IF YOU CHOOSE TO ACT NOW AND TENDER YOUR SHARES.

Paramount’s $30.00 All-Cash Offer for All of WBD Delivers Greater Value Than Netflix

Our offer is financially superior to Netflix’s transaction, which provides WBD shareholders with lower value, less cash and significantly less certainty. On its face, Netflix is offering WBD shareholders $23.25 per share in cash, $4.50 in stock and a share in WBD’s Global Networks spin-off. In reality, however, the total value is materially lower than advertised:

1) Netflix’s cash component is ~$18 billion lower than Paramount’s in the aggregate (~$7 per share).

2) Netflix’s stock price closed at $96.71 on Tuesday and, as of this writing, is trading at $93.81, more than $4 below the low-end of the collar on its stock consideration. This reduces the value of Netflix’s offer.

3) During the pendency of a regulatory review process that could take two years or more, WBD shareholders will be exposed to Netflix stock’s downside risk, including technology sector volatility, a lofty ~25x forward EBITDA multiple and the uncertainty of seven future quarterly earnings results. For reference, Netflix has lost approximately one quarter of its market capitalization ($110+ billion) since its last quarterly earnings report and amid its pursuit of WBD.

4) Buried in an 8-K filing on Friday was a mechanism providing a dollar-for-dollar reduction in the purchase price if more debt gets allocated to Streaming & Studios because of an unspecified cap on Global Networks. While the limit is undisclosed, every $1 billion above it could represent a reduction of ~$0.40 / share.

5) Netflix’s transaction leaves WBD shareholders with 100% of the risk of the Global Networks standalone plan. As outlined on our December 8 investor call, we believe Global Networks is worth ~$1 / share which would mean a total headline value to WBD shareholders in the Netflix deal of $28.75 – below our $30.00 all-cash offer. This is before any risk adjustments described above and any time-value-of-money discounting of Netflix’s offer to account for the substantially longer timeline to close (~$1.25 / share for every six months).1 In addition, the Netflix transaction would further exacerbate the decline of Global Networks.

1 Based on 4.5x consensus next twelve months EBITDA (including allocation of stock-based compensation and corporate overhead) of $3.9 billion as of Q3’26 (expected separation closing date WBD announced as part of Netflix transaction) and net debt of $15 billion. 4.5x multiple is based on equity research analysts who perform a sum-of-the-parts analysis of WBD and is also within range of where research analysts expect Versant to trade, despite the facts that Versant will have materially lower net leverage (~1.25x vs. Global Networks >3x), strong news (e.g., CNBC and MS Now), live sports (e.g., Golf Channel, English Premier League, the Olympics, others) and high-growth digital assets (e.g., GolfNow, Fandango). WBD Linear has also historically struggled to achieve analyst consensus expectations.

Paramount Has Air Tight Financing to Deliver on its Offer to You

Paramount has lined up all necessary financing to deliver its $30.00 per share all-cash offer to WBD shareholders.

As presented to the WBD Board, Paramount’s offer is not subject to any financing conditions and will be financed by $41 billion of new equity backstopped by the Ellison family and RedBird Capital and $54 billion of debt commitments from Bank of America, Citi and Apollo.

On December 3, WBD told us they wanted an Ellison family backstop on our equity financing. We delivered it to them less than 24 hours later. Our December 4 offer included an equity commitment from the Ellison family trust, which contains over $250 billion of assets (more than 6x the equity funding commitment) including approximately 1.16 billion Oracle shares and tens of billions of dollars in other assets. This information is publicly available; and, notably, the trust has been a counterparty in other completed public company transactions including for Twitter, which involved one of WBD’s advisors. In fact, the equity commitment papers submitted to WBD were identical in all material respects to commitments that the advisors to WBD had agreed to in other large transactions such as Twitter and Electronic Arts.

To suggest that we are not “good for the money” (or might commit fraud to try to escape our obligations), as certain reports have speculated, is absurd. That absurdity is underscored by the fact that WBD and its advisors never picked up the phone or typed out a responsive text or email to raise any question or concern or to seek any clarification about either the trust or our equity commitment papers.

Our debt commitments are not conditioned upon Paramount’s financial condition nor is there any “material adverse change” condition tied to Paramount. The conditions dovetail with our proposed merger agreement, which provided maximum certainty to WBD and its shareholders.

Netflix Faces Severe Regulatory Uncertainty & Closing Risk – Paramount Does Not

Paramount’s offer not only delivers superior value and certainty, but also a much shorter and more certain path to completion. To underscore our confidence, we have already filed for Hart-Scott-Rodino (HSR) approval in the United States and announced the case to the European Commission, opening the path to pre-notification discussions. We look forward to working collaboratively with the relevant authorities to work through the review process and deliver this transaction to you and our other stakeholders.

WBD’s transaction with Netflix, on the other hand, appears to be in for a long and bumpy ride as it navigates the global regulatory review process. Netflix is the #1 streaming business globally by subscriber count and HBO Max is #4. Combining these two yields an overwhelming market share of ~43% – more than 2x the #2. This is in addition to the other serious competition concerns raised, including from vertically integrating WBD’s film and TV production studios into Netflix, which will give Netflix greater leverage over theatrical exhibitors and creative talent alike. Notably, and as an indicator of its global dominance, Netflix’s current equity market capitalization dwarfs that of all other major media companies and theatrical exhibitors combined (even after the above-mentioned $110+ billion loss in value):

(1) Based on unaffected price as of September 10, 2025 (prior to WSJ leak).

Outside the United States, Netflix’s regulatory path is particularly challenged in Europe where its dominance is far more entrenched. Our analysis was conducted by the former deputies of merger enforcements for the European Commission and the U.K.’s Competition and Markets Authority. Netflix is by far the dominant streaming service in Europe, accounting for 51% of the total European OTT subscription revenue in 2024, with Disney a distant second at only 10%. The acquisition of WBD’s Streaming & Studios business is a blatant attempt to eliminate one of Netflix’s only viable international competitors in HBO Max. Market share analysis aside, Netflix also needs to satisfy Europe’s new landmark Digital Services Act and Digital Markets Act created for a situation precisely like this – protecting consumers from Big Tech overreach.

The argument being advanced publicly by Netflix and its proxies states that regulators should ignore the SVOD market and instead utilize a gerrymandered market definition that includes services like YouTube, TikTok, Instagram, and Facebook. Netflix’s claim boils down to trying to mask its dominance in SVOD by grouping together all internet-enabled video, media, social media, or otherwise. No regulator has ever accepted such a broad approach to market definition, and to do so would require regulators to give up on merger enforcement in media and social media alike.

It is noteworthy that, unlike Paramount’s willingness to agree to remedies up to a “material adverse effect” on the combined company, Netflix’s regulatory remedy commitments expressly state no remedy whatsoever can be imposed on Netflix’s business. Netflix also has a longer timeline — an “outside date” of 21 months. Paramount backed up its commitments with a $5 billion regulatory reverse termination fee. Netflix’s incremental $800 million over that amount does not close the gap between the differences in regulatory complexity and challenges.

For the avoidance of doubt, our $6 billion synergy estimate does not rely on cuts to content budgets at our studios and we intend to continue running both separately post-close. Our synergy analysis relies on efficiencies elsewhere across the combined organization, including technology, linear networks optimization, and real estate rationalization. Having experienced what it is like to act in and produce films first-hand, I have profound respect for creative talent. This is why we are fully pro-Hollywood, dedicated to supporting a growing theatrical slate of over 30 films per year and investing in the people and storytelling that drive the industry forward.

WBD’s Murky Sale Process

Over the last few days, we have heard from WBD shareholders and other stakeholders all asking the same question—what happened? Frankly, we are asking the same question.

The WBD sale “process” was unusual in that, over the entire period, its advisors never delivered to Paramount a single markup of any of our transaction documents—not our merger agreement nor our equity commitment documents. In addition, there was not a single “real time” negotiating session with us.

When Paramount submitted its fifth proposal on December 1, a proposal accompanied by full transaction documents that we stated we were prepared to sign, we offered $26.50 / share in cash.

On December 3, WBD provided feedback on Paramount’s proposal and communicated that the WBD Board would be “meeting periodically over the course of this week” but they never asked for a re-bid (which is strange if your goal is to maximize value for shareholders). On that call, our advisors asked whether the WBD Board continued to prioritize cash consideration as they had consistently communicated to us. WBD’s lead advisor’s response: “Isn’t cash always king?” One must ask: was that same message being delivered to Netflix?

Despite the opaque process, Paramount proactively submitted a revised offer with full transaction documentation in under 24 hours (at 11:00 am ET on December 4) and stated that Paramount and our funding sources were ready to sign it immediately. This revised offer addressed all of the scarce feedback that Paramount received.

Yet on that final pivotal day when WBD’s fate hung in the balance, we received not a single call, text or email to clarify anything about Paramount’s $30 per share all cash offer. Instead, and while in possession of our superior and fully committed bid and documents that entire day, the WBD Board and its advisors sprinted toward a deal with Netflix (even ignoring two separate texts from myself and Paramount’s advisors stating that we had never said “best and final”).

WBD Shareholders Have the Power to Get WBD on the Right Path

Our proposal represents a compelling opportunity for WBD shareholders. We are committed to seeing this transaction through.

Since Monday, we have had the opportunity to speak with a number of WBD shareholders who have expressed confusion and disappointment at the process that WBD conducted, which appears to have prioritized a deal with Netflix over shareholder value maximization. Multiple equity research notes published over the last 48 hours have also agreed that our offer is superior and that the Global Networks spin-off does not close the gap to $30.00 in cash.

From here, you can expect WBD to respond to our tender offer within 10 business days via a 14D-9 filing with the SEC. Our tender offer will remain open for at least 20 business days. The closing of the tender offer is conditioned upon, among other things, a majority of WBD shares tendering in our favor, receipt of regulatory approvals, termination of the Netflix merger agreement and entry into a definitive merger agreement with us.

WE URGE YOU TO REGISTER YOUR VIEW WITH THE WBD BOARD THAT YOU DEEM PARAMOUNT’S OFFER TO BE SUPERIOR BY TENDERING YOUR SHARES TODAY.

Sincerely,

David Ellison
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Paramount Skydance Corporation

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