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Netflix co-CEOs Ted Sarandos and Greg Peters made a high-profile visit to the Warner Bros. studio lot in Burbank on Wednesday, receiving a guided tour from Warner Bros. Discovery CEO David Zaslav in a calculated show of unity as the companies move toward their $82.7 billion merger.variety
The visit came hours after Warner Bros. Discovery’s board unanimously rejected Paramount’s $108 billion hostile takeover bid and reaffirmed its recommendation for Netflix’s offer, calling it the “superior” and “more certain” path forward for shareholders.cnbc
Warner Bros. Discovery’s board cited “significant risks and costs” associated with Paramount’s $30-per-share all-cash offer, which seeks to acquire the entire company including its cable networks. The board expressed particular concern that the Ellison family, led by Oracle co-founder Larry Ellison, has not provided a full equity backstop for the financing, instead relying on what the board described as an “unknown and opaque revocable trust”.cnbc
Board Chairman Samuel Di Piazza said Netflix’s cash-and-stock deal of $27.75 per share provides greater certainty, backed by Netflix’s $400 billion market capitalization and investment-grade balance sheet. Netflix has also committed to a record $5.8 billion reverse termination fee if the deal fails regulatory approval.businessinsider
During Wednesday’s studio visit, Sarandos and Peters met with approximately 400 Warner Bros. employees at the Steven J. Ross Theater and fielded questions from staff. Photos released by Warner Bros. Discovery showed the trio strolling past the iconic Warner Bros. water tower.variety
Netflix has defended the deal by arguing the combined entity would capture just 9.2% of U.S. TV viewership, still trailing YouTube at 12.9% and Disney at 11.4%. By contrast, a Paramount-Warner Bros. Discovery combination would command 14% of the market.prnewswire
The streaming giant has also committed to maintaining traditional theatrical windows for Warner Bros. films, seeking to alleviate industry concerns that the deal would further erode cinema attendance. “Our intentions when we buy Warner Bros. will be to continue to release Warner Bros. studio movies in theaters with the traditional windows,” Sarandos said earlier this week at a Paris event.deadline
Warner Bros. Discovery shareholders have until January 8 to tender their shares to Paramount, though that deadline could be extended. If shareholders reject the Netflix deal in favor of Paramount, Warner Bros. Discovery would owe Netflix a $2.8 billion breakup fee.businessinsider