Warner Bros Discovery board rejects rival $163bn bid from Paramount


Warner Bros Discovery’s board has rejected Paramount Skydance’s $US108.4 billion ($A163.7 bn) hostile bid, saying it failed to provide adequate financing assurances.

In a letter to shareholders, disclosed in a regulatory filing, the board wrote that Paramount had “consistently misled” Warner Bros shareholders that its $US30-per-share cash offer was fully guaranteed, or “backstopped,” by the Ellison family, led by billionaire and Oracle CEO Larry Ellison.

“It does not, and never has,” the board wrote of the guarantee of Paramount’s offer, noting that the offer posed “numerous, significant risks”.

Warner Bros’s board also said it found Paramount’s offer “inferior” to the merger agreement with Netflix’s.

The streaming giant’s $US27.75 per share offer for Warner Bros’s film and television studios, its library and the HBO Max streaming service is a binding agreement that requires no equity financing and has robust debt commitments, the board wrote.

Warner Bros has not yet set a date for a shareholder vote on the deal but it is expected to happen sometime in spring or early summer, its Chairman Samuel Di Piazza said in an interview with CNBC.

Paramount did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment, while Netflix welcomed the move.

“The Warner Bros Discovery Board reinforced that Netflix’s merger agreement is superior and that our acquisition is in the best interest of stockholders,” its co-CEO Ted Sarandos, said in a statement.

Warner Bros shares were down 1.4 per cent at $US28.5 in pre-market trading, while Netflix gained 1.5 per cent and Paramount fell 1.8 per cent.

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The dramatic escalation in the fight for Warner Bros is one of the biggest in recent corporate memory, drawing an unlikely cast of celebrities and business figures including Jared Kushner.

Paramount last week took its case directly to Warner Bros shareholders, arguing that it has arranged “air-tight financing” to support its bid, with $US41 billion in new equity assured by the Ellison family and RedBird Capital, and $US54 billion of debt commitments from Bank of America, Citi and Apollo.

The Warner Bros Discovery board countered on Wednesday that Paramount’s most recent offer includes an equity commitment “for which there is no Ellison family commitment of any kind,” but rather the backing of “an unknown and opaque” Lawrence J. Ellison Revocable Trust, whose assets and liabilities are not publicly disclosed and are subject to change.

“Despite having been told repeatedly by WBD how important a full and unconditional financing commitment from the Ellison family was…the Ellison family has chosen not to backstop the PSKY offer,” the Warner Bros board wrote.

“A revocable trust is no replacement for a secured commitment by a controlling shareholder.”

Paramount’s creditworthiness questioned

Paramount has submitted a total of six bids to acquire the entire Warner Bros studio, including its television networks, including CNN and TNT Sports.

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It has previously said the Ellison family trust — which Paramount says contains more than $US250 billion in assets including about 1.16 billion shares of Oracle — is more than adequate to cover the equity commitment.

“To suggest that we are not ‘good for the money’ (or might commit fraud to try to escape our obligations), as certain reports have speculated, is absurd,” Paramount wrote in a letter to Warner Bros’s shareholders last week.

Its debt commitments are not conditioned on Paramount’s financial condition, it wrote.

Warner Bros, however, pointed in the filing Wednesday to what it described as structural risks in Paramount’s proposed financing, and also raised questions about Paramount’s financial condition and creditworthiness.

The offer relied on a seven-party, cross-conditional structure, with the Ellison Revocable Trust providing just 32 per cent of the required equity commitment while capping its liability at $US2.8 billion, Warner Bros said. It noted that the trust’s assets could be withdrawn at any time.

Debt levels after deal with Paramount will be risky

Netflix’s offer is backed by a public company with a market cap in excess of $US400 billion with an investment grade balance sheet, the Warner board noted.

The company has told Warner Bros it would keep releasing the studio’s films in cinemas in a bid to ease fears that its deal would eliminate another studio and major source of theatrical films, according to people familiar with the matter.

Paramount, by contrast, has a $US15 billion market capitalisation and a credit rating “a notch above ‘junk’,” Warner Bros noted on Wednesday.

Should the deal close, Paramount would have a debt ratio of 6.8 times its operating income “with virtually no current free cash flow”.

The bidder would also impose what Warner Bros said would be “onerous operating restrictions” on the company, during the potentially lengthy period between signing and closing, including limits on new content licensing deals.

Paramount’s plans to achieve $US9 billion in “synergies” across the two studios was described as “ambitious” from an operational standpoint, the Warner Bros board noted, and would represent a new round of job losses that “would make Hollywood weaker, not stronger”.

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Warner Bros Discovery’s board dismissed Paramount’s charges of unfairness — that had been set forth in a filing by Paramount last week — saying it held “dozens” of calls and meetings with the studio’s principals and advisors, including four in-person meetings and meals with CEO David Zaslav and Paramount CEO David Ellison, or his father, Larry Ellison.

“After each bid, we informed PSKY of the material deficiencies and offered potential solutions,” the Warner Bros board wrote. “Despite this feedback, PSKY has never submitted a proposal that is superior to the Netflix merger agreement”.

Paramount said it has already applied for regulatory approval in the United States, and has alerted European regulators, shortening the path to regulatory approval.

Warner Bros Discovery’s board wrote that it considered the regulatory risks in evaluating the Netflix and Paramount offers, and believes that either transaction would obtain the necessary US and foreign regulatory approvals.

Netflix also offered a $US5.8 billion break-up fee that was higher than Paramount’s $US5 billion break-up fee.

The Warner Bros Discovery board also described the Paramount offer as “illusory,” adding that it could be terminated or amended at any time prior to the deal’s completion, which is not the same as a binding merger agreement.

“The PSKY offer provides an untenable degree of risk and potential downside for WBD shareholders,” the board wrote.

Reuters


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