Netflix is the real winner after Paramount’s $111B Warner Bros deal

Streaming wars turn into Wall Street battle as Netflix avoids $83B Warner Bros. Discovery deal and boosts buybacks.

Perhaps February 26, 2026, will go down in the annals of time as the day the so-called ‘Streaming Wars’ became a game of chess played out in the corridors of Wall Street. After weeks of intense negotiations, Netflix officially threw in the towel in its bid to acquire Warner Bros. Discovery. But in an unexpected turn of events, the firm’s shares shot up by almost 10%, with the firm being hailed as having won the ‘war’ by retreating.

Wall Street cheers Netflix’s retreat from Warner Bros. Discovery

In an announcement, the firm’s two co-CEOs, Ted Sarandos and Greg Peters, said they did not consider their decision as an outright failure in the bid to acquire Warner Bros Discovery. The two said, while acquiring Warner Bros Discovery would have been “‘nice to have’ at the right price, not a ‘must-have’ at any price,’” they were not willing to pay the final price for the acquisition, which was $31 per share, while at the same time taking on the firm’s huge linear television debt, as well as its old cable television assets, which are not growing but declining in value.

Netflix chose to spend its money on content by committing to spend $20 billion on content in 2026 and to restart its stock buyback program. Wall Street was thrilled.

The winners of this war appear to be Paramount Global and Skydance. However, there is a catch to this whole deal. The $111 billion enterprise deal is being backed by David Ellison and his father, Oracle co-founder Larry Ellison. It is also being backed by $57.5 billion in debt from the top banks in the United States. This new company will have over $90 billion in debt, and consolidation is a given.

And then there is Washington. This deal apparently has a $7 billion termination fee to be paid should Washington DC not approve this deal. This is not chump change, even for this large a deal.

So, Paramount Skydance has apparently won this war. However, the real winners of this war were Netflix, since they got out of this deal at a great price, and their stocks rose. The biggest celebration of this war may be from the party that didn’t buy anything at all.

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Sumedha Chatterjee
Sumedha Chatterjee

Sumedha Chatterjee is a Delhi University graduate who studied Geography, a subject that deepened her fascination with how cultures and regions shape the way we experience cinema and art. Her love for storytelling began at an early age, surrounded by theatricals, cultural performances, and books that celebrated the art of creativity. What started as childhood wonder has grown into a passion for exploring films and expressing them through words. She strives to be a wordsmith who captures not just the craft of cinema but the emotions it stirs, weaving together thoughtful and relatable narratives.

When she isn’t writing, Sumedha can be found binge-watching The Big Bang Theory, laughing at the clever chaos of Gintama, or crocheting little pieces of joy. With every step forward, she hopes to bring fresh insight and warmth to the worlds of film criticism and cultural writing.

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