Netflix Buys Warner Bros in $82.7B Deal
© Netflix & Warner Bros.
Netflix announced on December 5, 2025, that it will acquire the studios and streaming business of Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD) in a massive deal valued at about US$82.7 billion (equity value roughly $72 billion).
What’s Happening? The Netflix Deal Details
Under the agreement:
- Netflix will take ownership of Warner Bros’ film & TV studios, the HBO/HBO Max streaming assets, DC Entertainment/DC Studios, and the vast content libraries and franchises associated with them, from classic films to modern blockbusters.
- The purchase excludes WBD’s linear cable networks (like CNN, TNT, and Discovery channels). Those assets will be spun off into a separate company (to be named “Discovery Global”) before the acquisition finalizes — expected around Q3 2026.
- Additionally, Warner Bros. shareholders will receive $27.75 per share in cash + stock, under the agreed terms.
According to Netflix’s co-CEOs, the merger aims to combine Netflix’s global reach and streaming experience with Warner Bros’ century-long legacy of storytelling — potentially creating “the next century of entertainment.”
What the Netflix Deal Actually Means
If approved and completed, this merger would dramatically reshape the entertainment landscape:
- Netflix would instantly gain rights to dozens of major franchises and iconic films/series — from blockbuster franchises to classic TV catalogs. It significantly boosts Netflix’s content library and competitive edge.
- The combined entity could benefit from cost savings: Netflix projects $2–3 billion annual savings by the third year after merger close.
- Moreover, for consumers, the merger might mean access to a “one-stop shop” of mainstream film and TV content under a single roof — potentially reducing the need for multiple subscriptions.
But at the same time, this scale of consolidation gives Netflix unusual market power — combining its global subscriber base, streaming infrastructure, and storied content catalog.
Why Many Are Worried: Antitrust, Creativity & Industry Impact
Unsurprisingly, the deal triggered immediate concern and criticism:
- Antitrust issues: With Netflix and Warner Bros under one roof, the company could control a large share of streaming content globally, raising red flags over monopoly power and reduced competition.
- Impact on theaters & content diversity: Moreover, filmmakers, cinema-owners, and critics warn that this consolidation may threaten theatrical releases, reduce support for niche or indie projects, and give Netflix too much control over which films and shows get made — or survive.
- Risk to creative industry structure: With fewer large independent studios and more content centralized under one corporate roof, there are concerns about bargaining power for creators, workers, and smaller content producers.

Additionally, some in Hollywood and regulators argue this deal could drastically shift power away from creative talent — and toward a streaming corporate giant.
What’s Next — Regulatory Scrutiny, Spin-Offs & Uncertain Outcomes
Moreover, the acquisition will only close after multiple conditions are met:
- WBD must complete the spin-off of its linear networks (Discovery Global), currently scheduled for Q3 2026.
- Approval by regulators and antitrust authorities in the U.S. and possibly Europe — a major hurdle given concerns about market dominance and competitive harm.
- Shareholder votes and customary closing conditions.
Observers say approval is uncertain — but the stakes are enormous: if completed, this could reshape Hollywood, how media is produced and distributed, and what streaming looks like for decades.
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