Paramount is betting European regulators won’t approve WBD-Netflix. Here’s how it could play out

by | Jan 22, 2026 | Business

In this articleWBDPSKYNFLXFollow your favorite stocksCREATE FREE ACCOUNTA version of this article first appeared in the CNBC Sport newsletter with Alex Sherman, which brings you the biggest news and exclusive interviews from the worlds of sports business and media. Sign up to receive future editions, straight to your inbox.The future of the Warner Bros. Discovery company – its iconic movie studio, HBO Max, and its cable networks, including CNN, TBS, TNT, Discovery and HGTV – may come down to what European regulators think about Netflix.That’s a pretty crazy twist for a deal that will dictate the future of many valuable American sports rights – assets that, for the most part, have very little to do with Europe.A quick refresher: WBD owns many live U.S. sports rights, including those to March Madness, Major League Baseball, the National Hockey League, NASCAR, the French Open, AEW, the College Football Playoffs and others. But those rights wouldn’t go to Netflix under WBD’s agreed-upon deal to sell some of its assets to the streaming giant.Netflix has agreed to pay $27.75 per share for the WBD movie studio and streaming business, but not the cable networks, which own the sports rights. If the deal is approved, those networks would get spun out into a separate publicly traded entity called Discovery Global, which would also own Bleacher Report, House of Highlights and WBD’s other digital assets.If WBD shareholders accept a hostile takeover attempt from Paramount Skydance, however – and if that deal is approved – the cable networks and associated sports would all fall under the Paramount umbrella. Paramount has bid $30 per share for the entirety of WBD – an offer it has taken directly to shareholders after the WBD board rejected it.Paramount on Thursday extended the deadline on its tender offer — which expired Wednesday — giving WBD shareholders more time to weigh the option. WBD responded with a statement, noting that less than 7% of all shareholders have tendered their shares thus far to Paramount.”Once again, Paramount continues to make the same offer our Board has repeatedly and unanimously rejected in favor of a superior merger agreement with Netflix. It’s also clear our shareholders agree, with more than 93% also rejecting Paramount’s inferior scheme,” WBD said. “We are confident in our ability to achieve regulatory approval for the Netflix merger and look forward to delivering the tremendous and certain value our agreement will provide to Warner Bros. Discovery shareholders.”Most media attention has focused on what U.S. President Donald Trump might think about a Netflix-WBD deal. Netflix co-CEO Ted Sarandos met with Trump ahead of the deal to gauge his sentiment on a transaction. The U.S. Department of Justice — theoretically an independent body from the presidency – will ultimately decide whether or not the deal presents antitrust problems, and if those issues can be ameliorated with conditions or if they’re simply too big for a deal to go through.There’s been far less attention paid to Europe, which will also need to approve a deal. And that’s where either deal could fall apart. Netflix is a global company, generating about $14.5 billion in revenue in its “EMEA” (Europe, the Middle East and Africa) region last year, or about 32% of total sales. WBD feels confident its Netflix deal will win EU approval, according to people familiar with the matter. A WBD source said there was a “95% certainty” that Europe would approve the transaction, though the person did acknowledge Netflix may need to agree to certain conditions, such as agreeing to produce a certain amount of local content in Europe and promising to release movies into theaters. The EU’s Audiovisual Media Services Directive already mandates that video-on-demand streaming services ensure at least 30% of programming in EU countries qualify as European works. Paramount disagrees and believes a Netflix deal has very little chance of making it past European regulators, according to people familiar with the matter. At the same time, it’s working its own EU regulatory angles for its proposed takeover.It would be unusual but not unprecedented for European regulators to block a deal between two U.S.-based companies. Adobe dropped its $20 billion acquisition of cloud software company Figma in December 2023 after deciding there was “no clear path” to gaining antitrust approval in Europe and the U.K. The U.K.’s Competition and Markets Authority also forced Meta’s Facebook to sell Giphy, the largest supplier of animated gifs to social networks, in 2022.Get the CNBC Sport newsletter directly to your inboxThe CNBC Sport newsletter with Alex Sherman brings you the biggest news and exclusive interviews from the worlds of sports business and media, delivered weekly to your inbox.Subscribe here to get access today.It’s also worth noting the European Commission allowed Amazon to acquire MGM, perhaps the closest comparison in terms of comparative businesses to this deal.Paramount’s confidence stems from the continent’s track record of being tough on tech companies, with antitrust crackdowns and penalties targeting Meta, Microsoft, Google, Apple and Amazon in recent years. Paramount executives believe EU regulators view Netflix similarly, based on recent conversations they’ve had with European officials, according to people familiar with the matter. Given the chance to stop a Big Tech company from gaining even more market power, Paramount executives believe Eu …

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