Warner Bros. Discovery shareholders approve Paramount Skydance merger
Shareholders backed the $31-a-share sale to Paramount, but rejected a pay package for David Zaslav that could have exceeded $800 million.
- On Thursday, Warner Bros. Discovery shareholders voted overwhelmingly to approve the company's sale to Paramount Skydance, valuing the transaction at nearly $111 billion including debt.
- Paramount prevailed in a months-long bidding battle after offering $31 per share in cash, surpassing Netflix's rejected $72 billion proposal and prompting the board to endorse the bid.
- More than 4,000 industry figures voiced "unequivocal opposition" to the merger, citing mass layoffs and reduced creative choices; shareholders separately rejected CEO David Zaslav's non-binding compensation package.
- The deal faces ongoing antitrust reviews by the U.S. Department of Justice, European, and U.K. authorities; it includes a "ticking fee" that increases the price if not finalized by September 30.
- Critics, including Democratic Senator Cory Booker, warn of concentrated cultural power, while California Attorney General Rob Bonta investigates potential antitrust violations as the merger positions Paramount to control CNN and HBO.
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335 Articles
The endorsement comes as it was announced that Donald Trump will attend the dinner alongside billionaire Larry Ellis, who is behind Paramount.
Shareholders approve $81B merger | Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette
NEW YORK -- An $81 billion Warner-Paramount mega merger has received shareholders' stamp of approval, propelling a deal that could vastly reshape Hollywood and the wider media landscape closer to the finish line.
Paramount Takes the Lead with Mega-Merger: New Era for Hollywood and Media
Paramount Takes the Lead with Mega-Merger: New Era for Hollywood and Media In a landmark move, Warner Bros. Discovery shareholders have greenlighted an $81 billion sale to Paramount. This merger, pending regulatory review, promises to alter Hollywood's power dynamics significantly.The acquisition would position Paramount as a dominant force, uniting Warner's streaming platforms like HBO Max with Paramount's own services. Critics, however, voice …
Shareholders greenlight AU$156B Paramount-Warner merger
The biggest media merger since the disastrous US$165 billion AOL-Time Warner deal in 2000 just cleared its first major hurdle, but the corporate drama is only accelerating. Warner Bros. Discovery shareholders overwhelmingly approved Paramount Skydance’s AU$156 billion (US$111 billion) takeover bid during a special virtual meeting on Thursday. According to reports, investors happily took the cash but delivered a spectacular rebuke to outgoing lea…
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