New York, March 2, 2026, 07:09 EST — Early hours, premarket action.
- Ted Sarandos at Netflix says he pulled out of talks with WBD over the price, not for political reasons.
- WBD is still changing hands at a price lower than Paramount Skydance’s all-cash bid—investors are reading the spread as a sign of risk around the deal.
- In the immediate frame, regulators—California’s top of mind—and funding questions are drawing the closest attention.
Warner Bros. Discovery shares open Monday in the shadow of remarks from Netflix co-CEO Ted Sarandos, who told Bloomberg he pulled back on the deal, unwilling to go above $27.75 a share for the assets in play. “I still believe in all the positives. I just believed in them up to $27.75 a share,” Sarandos said, per Business Insider. WBD closed Friday at $28.17, marking a 0.6% gain from the previous session. Business Insider
The context is key, with Paramount Skydance locking in a $31.00 cash offer for each WBD share. That pegs the immediate upside—and sets a timer for fresh speculation. As of Friday, shares traded about $2.83 under the bid, leaving a deal spread near 9%. For traders, that gap spells uncertainty. Paramount’s set to go over the merger details in a conference call and webcast slated for 8:30 a.m. ET Monday. PR Newswire
California is already jumping in. State Attorney General Rob Bonta told Reuters the state’s investigation is underway and pledged a “vigorous” review. Analysts at TD Cowen, for their part, called state efforts to block the merger “very likely.” Reuters also pointed out that Paramount’s mention of $6 billion in cost “synergies” typically hints at layoffs and deep cuts—moves that rarely go unnoticed in Hollywood’s backyard. Reuters
Wall Street’s watching to see if this is the merger that pushes streaming into its next consolidation wave—and if subscribers end up footing the bill. IDC’s Alex Holtz told Barron’s that Paramount and WBD’s plan to combine their content libraries will probably bring higher prices. He referenced Disney’s own streaming rollout and subsequent hikes as precedent. Barron’s
WBD shareholders are mostly watching the clock, not the income statement. As long as regulators don’t throw up roadblocks and financing holds up, shares usually creep closer to the deal price. But throw in a snag, and the spread can blow out fast.
The competitive tension is still in play: Netflix exited the auction, leaving a competitor to handle more debt and the complications of integration as ad and linear-TV headwinds persist. That’s the backdrop for Sarandos’ weekend price comment—it was a clear line in the sand about his price ceiling, and what he refused to pay.
The risk is straightforward: drawn-out state litigation, an unexpectedly strict federal review, or union opposition demanding new terms could push back the closing and keep the gap from narrowing. Should the deal collapse, WBD would revert to trading on its fundamentals and leverage instead of a $31 cash overhang.
Eyes are peeled for early clues from Sacramento and Washington. Paramount’s tone on how it plans to wrap up the deal and merge operations will get scrutiny, too. Investors want to know how fast management thinks it can hit cost cuts—without running afoul of labor or politics.
Investors will be tuning in at 8:30 a.m. ET on Monday, looking for hard details instead of catchphrases: they want clarity on regulatory steps, exact timelines, and especially how the merged company intends to manage streaming so it doesn’t lose more subscribers.