New York, June 13, 2026, 10:02 (EDT).
- Warner Bros. Discovery shares last traded at $26.98, up 0.45%, after the Justice Department cleared Paramount Skydance’s planned acquisition.
- The agreed deal price is $31 per WBD share in cash, leaving the stock below the takeover value as investors price in remaining regulatory and legal risk.
- The next major catalysts are remaining approvals abroad, the FCC-related foreign-interest review, and whether state attorneys general sue to block the transaction.
Warner Bros. Discovery, Inc. shares moved higher but stayed well below Paramount Skydance’s agreed takeover price after the U.S. Justice Department closed its antitrust investigation into the proposed media merger. The latest available quote showed Nasdaq-listed WBD at $26.98, up $0.12, with intraday volume of about 16.2 million shares and a market value near $67.2 billion.
The stock reaction matters because WBD has effectively become a merger-arbitrage trade, meaning investors are pricing the probability that a signed deal closes rather than valuing the company only on its standalone earnings. Paramount agreed in February to buy WBD for $31 per share in cash, valuing the target at $81 billion in equity value and $110 billion in enterprise value; enterprise value is a broader takeover measure that includes equity and debt. Paramount At $26.98, the shares offer about 15% upside to the cash consideration, but that discount also signals that investors still see execution risk.
The Justice Department’s decision removed the biggest U.S. antitrust hurdle. Reuters reported that the agency said the transaction was unlikely to harm competition or consumers after reviewing streaming video, traditional television and theatrical film markets. Reuters The Associated Press reported that regulators concluded the combined company could become a more robust alternative to larger streaming services, while still noting industry concerns about consolidation, job losses and fewer choices for filmmakers.
The next major catalyst is not one event but a cluster of approvals and legal decisions. Reuters reported that the Federal Communications Commission has not yet approved a petition tied to foreign interests in the deal’s financing structure, while California, New York and other states have been preparing a possible lawsuit. Reuters Outside the U.S., AP reported that the European Commission has listed July 7 as a tentative review deadline and the U.K. Competition and Markets Authority is aiming for an initial decision by early August.
The bull case is straightforward: if the deal closes on the agreed terms, WBD holders receive $31 per share in cash, plus a ticking fee if closing slips past September 30, 2026. A ticking fee is an added payment designed to compensate target shareholders for deal delays; WBD has said shareholders would receive $0.25 per share for each quarter, measured daily, after that date. Warner Bros. Discovery Paramount has also said it expects more than $6 billion in synergies, or cost and revenue benefits from combining operations, although those benefits would accrue to the buyer rather than WBD shareholders if the cash deal closes.
The bear case is that the remaining spread exists for a reason. State litigation, foreign regulatory reviews or FCC-related conditions could delay or threaten closing, and the media industry’s structural pressures have not disappeared: linear television remains under pressure, streaming is expensive and competitive, and the combined company would still need to integrate major studios, news assets and streaming platforms. WBD’s standalone valuation also does not look clean on traditional earnings metrics because the latest quote data show negative earnings per share, making the price-to-earnings ratio — the share price divided by per-share profit — negative and less useful as a valuation anchor.
That makes WBD look risky rather than simply cheap today. The discount to $31 may be attractive for investors comfortable with merger-closing risk, but the stock is not a normal low-valuation media turnaround story at this point. For most investors, the key question is whether the remaining regulatory path justifies a roughly 15% potential return to the cash deal price, with the downside tied to what WBD might be worth if the Paramount transaction is delayed, repriced or blocked.