Today: 28 June 2026
CBS Stock Today: Paramount Skydance Enters Monday Under Pressure as $110 Billion Warner Bros Deal Hits Antitrust Test
27 April 2026
2 mins read

CBS Stock Today: Paramount Skydance Enters Monday Under Pressure as $110 Billion Warner Bros Deal Hits Antitrust Test

New York, April 27, 2026, 06:29 EDT

  • Paramount Skydance, which owns CBS, ended Friday’s session at $10.97, falling 2.66%. Regular U.S. stock trading hadn’t begun yet Monday.
  • Shareholders at Warner Bros Discovery gave the nod to Paramount’s $110 billion takeover plan, putting the deal squarely in the hands of regulators now.
  • CBS, CNN, HBO Max, and Paramount+ would all land within the same parent company if the deal goes through.

Paramount Skydance, CBS’s parent, faces another tough premarket session Monday in the U.S. Shares remained in the red after Friday’s close, as investors tallied up a significant deal victory but kept a wary eye on what could be a drawn-out regulatory process.

Retail investors still plug in “CBS stock,” but what they’ll get now is Paramount Skydance Class B, ticker PSKY. That switch came after last year’s Skydance-Paramount tie-up; a company filing confirmed the Class B shares trade on Nasdaq as PSKY. The separate CBS stock? It’s gone. Paramount

Warner Bros Discovery shareholders just signed off on Paramount’s $110 billion merger. That clears a major obstacle and shifts attention right to the antitrust process—now, regulators step in to judge if the deal could stifle competition, push prices higher, or limit what consumers can pick.

Shares of Paramount ended April 24 at $10.97, slipping from $11.27 the previous session and $11.80 back on April 22, company investor-relations data show. Roughly 6.29 million shares changed hands on Friday.

Warner Bros Discovery shareholders gave a resounding yes to the merger with Paramount during a special meeting. Board chair Samuel A. Di Piazza Jr. pointed to what he called stockholder “support and confidence.” CEO David Zaslav described the vote as “another key milestone” on the road to closing the deal. PR Newswire

Things got murky after that. The U.S. Department of Justice issued subpoenas in late March, looking for details about studio output, content rights, streaming rivals, and movie theater dynamics, according to Reuters. PP Foresight’s Paolo Pescatore flagged a “twofold challenge” for management: not just securing approval, but also showing the deal will drive value—without stoking new pay fears. Reuters

Mike Proulx, research director at Forrester, flagged that “real regulatory pressure sits overseas”—with European regulators likely to scrutinize how the merged market takes shape. That’s the risk on investors’ minds now. The shareholder vote, required for the deal, wasn’t the finish line. Reuters

The competition is fierce. Paramount beat Netflix after a long battle for Warner Bros, setting up a potential merger that would unite CBS, Paramount+, Warner Bros, HBO Max, and CNN—plus vast film and TV catalogs. Netflix is still the most obvious streaming peer in the mix, but Warner Bros Discovery has shifted from being simply a rival to the main takeover target.

The risk: if regulators or state attorneys general raise antitrust concerns—pointing to impacts on streaming, film, or TV news—the deal could see delays, face pushback, or even end up trimmed down. According to The Guardian, the merger still requires green lights from the Department of Justice and European authorities, and a legal challenge from state attorneys general remains on the table.

CBS isn’t just a network play these days. Reuters’ company profile points out that Paramount Skydance spreads across studios, streaming platforms, and TV media—CBS, CBS News 24/7, and CBS Sports all land under TV Media, which also houses Paramount+, Pluto TV, and BET+.

So Monday’s setup looks straightforward, though hardly effortless. Paramount already has the shareholder vote it required from Warner Bros Discovery. The market’s focus now: sizing up the debt, the timeline, and the regulatory hurdles attached to the deal.

Marcin Frąckiewicz is the founder and CEO of TS2 Space, a satellite communications company serving customers around the world. A graduate of the Warsaw School of Economics (SGH), he has more than two decades of experience in telecommunications, satellite services and technology ventures. He writes about satellite communications, space technology, artificial intelligence and the stock market, with a particular focus on technology companies, semiconductors, emerging industries and the trends shaping global innovation.

Stock Market Today

  • Aristocrat Leisure Unveils A$1.12 Billion Buy-Back Balance Ahead of July Update
    June 28, 2026, 11:49 AM EDT. Aristocrat Leisure Ltd (ASX:ALL) has repurchased 24.56 million shares, spending A$1.38 billion of its A$2.5 billion buyback program, leaving around A$1.12 billion available. The stock closed at A$58.69 on June 26, up 8.2% for the week, outperforming the S&P/ASX 200 which fell 0.7%. Aristocrat's investor briefing and interim dividend payout of 50 cents per share are scheduled for July 1. With shares currently trading about 20% below their 52-week high of A$73.29, the remaining buyback funds could repurchase roughly 19.1 million shares, supporting the stock amid mixed market sentiment. Analyst consensus suggests modest upside with a 12-month average price target of A$63.34, highlighting cautious optimism ahead of forthcoming updates.

Latest articles

Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) trades after Prime Day jump, AWS in focus as basket sizes shrink

Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) trades after Prime Day jump, AWS in focus as basket sizes shrink

28 June 2026
Amazon closed Friday at $232.69, up 2.5% on massive volume, but still down 4.8% from June 18; Prime Day U.S. sales jumped 9.3% to $26.4 billion as average order size fell 10.6%, while AWS will raise AI compute prices by about 20% in July, spotlighting investor focus on whether higher AWS pricing can offset soaring AI infrastructure costs.
Ripple MiCA Approval Moves RLUSD, XRP (CRYPTO:XRP) Not Focus, in Europe Payments Push

Ripple MiCA Approval Moves RLUSD, XRP (CRYPTO:XRP) Not Focus, in Europe Payments Push

28 June 2026
Ripple’s preliminary Luxembourg crypto license could open regulated EU payments, but XRP traded near $1.05—still 71% below its 2025 high—as investors await proof that RLUSD stablecoin flows drive real demand on the XRP Ledger, not just Ripple’s private platform; RLUSD supply fell 9% in 30 days while XRPL stablecoin value rose 20%.
Plug Power (NASDAQ:PLUG) stock heads into June 30 cash deadline after shares fall five days

Plug Power (NASDAQ:PLUG) stock heads into June 30 cash deadline after shares fall five days

28 June 2026
Plug Power (PLUG) fell 1.17% to $2.54 Friday, capping a five-day, 10.9% slide as volume jumped above average, with investors eyeing a June 30 deadline to close a $132.5M–$142M asset sale to Stream Data Centers—a key liquidity event equal to up to 64% of unrestricted cash and nearly all Q1 operating cash use—amid a shortened trading week before the July 3 market holiday.
Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL) faces Gemini shortage as Chrome training draws crowds

Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL) faces Gemini shortage as Chrome training draws crowds

28 June 2026
Chrome’s 70.25% global browser share cements its role as Alphabet’s key gateway for AI features and ad revenue, with Q1 Search & other ads delivering $60.4 billion—about 55% of total revenue—while Google faces supply limits for Gemini AI and ongoing antitrust risks; shares last quoted at $337.39, down 2.0%.
Atomera Stock Jumps Nearly 50% After Synopsys Deal Puts GaN Chip Tech in Focus
Previous Story

Atomera Stock Jumps Nearly 50% After Synopsys Deal Puts GaN Chip Tech in Focus

Dow Jones Today: Oil Spike, Fed Week and Big Tech Earnings Put Rally on Edge
Next Story

Dow Jones Today: Oil Spike, Fed Week and Big Tech Earnings Put Rally on Edge

Go toTop