In a landmark move that could reshape the global entertainment industry, Netflix has announced plans to acquire Warner Bros. Discovery’s studio and streaming business in a deal valued at $82.7 billion, including debt. The cash-and-stock agreement is expected to be finalised only after Warner Bros. Discovery completes its previously announced plan to carve out its cable television business, a process that is projected to conclude by the third quarter of 2026.
The acquisition is expected to send shockwaves through Hollywood and the wider media landscape. Already the world’s largest paid streaming platform with more than 300 million subscribers worldwide, Netflix’s takeover of Warner Bros. Discovery’s premium assets would create an unprecedented entertainment powerhouse. Industry insiders believe this move could significantly increase Netflix’s leverage over cinema chains, production houses and major entertainment unions, while putting pressure on smaller media companies to merge in order to stay competitive.
This deal also marks a historic moment in the power shift between traditional Hollywood studios and Silicon Valley tech giants. While technology companies have had a growing influence in entertainment, they have largely built their own content empires from scratch. With this acquisition, Warner Bros. becomes the first major legacy Hollywood studio to be taken over by a tech-driven streaming company, symbolising the end of an era and the beginning of a new media order.
“Together, we can give audiences more of what they love and help define the next century of storytelling,” Netflix co-CEO Ted Sarandos said in a statement, signalling the company’s broader ambition to dominate not just streaming, but the entire global content ecosystem.
The Netflix-Warner Bros. deal follows an intense bidding war involving major players such as Comcast and Paramount. All three companies reportedly submitted improved offers this week, with Netflix ultimately prevailing by putting forward a predominantly cash-based proposal.
Comcast had also shown strong interest in acquiring Warner Bros. Discovery’s studios and its streaming platform, HBO Max. Meanwhile, Paramount CEO David Ellison, supported financially by his billionaire father, had been attempting to purchase the entire Warner Bros. Discovery empire – including its traditional television networks like CNN and TNT.
If completed, the acquisition will not only redraw the competitive map of the entertainment world but could also redefine how films and television are produced, distributed and consumed in the coming decades.
