One of the biggest media deals in history is inching toward the finish line. But first, Paramount Skydance must clear a significant hurdle in Europe.
The proposed acquisition of Warner Bros. Discovery by Paramount Skydance (PSKY) is valued at $110 billion, Bloomberg confirmed.
It would combine two of Hollywood's most storied studios, two major news networks, and a combined streaming base of over 200 million subscribers, Bloomberg noted.
But before any of that becomes reality, EU regulators want some concessions.
The European Commission has set a deadline of July 7, 2026, to decide whether to approve the deal or escalate its review, according to Bloomberg. The pressure is on for Paramount to move fast.
EU competition chief Teresa Ribera flagged concerns about film distribution during the review, according to Bloomberg.
Specifically, she wants to ensure that "alternatives that producers and filmmakers can find" exist to get their content into movie theaters and homes.
Her comments followed a meeting in Brussels between Paramount's lawyers and European Commission enforcers.
Ribera also raised questions about whether the deal could limit creativity or restrict recognition of cultural heritage and languages across Europe, Bloomberg reported.
The most concrete demand so far, noted by Bloomberg, is that Paramount may need to exit a joint venture it holds with Universal Pictures.
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According to people familiar with the matter who spoke to Bloomberg on condition of anonymity, Paramount is open to making that move in exchange for regulatory clearance.
A Paramount spokesperson said the company has "been engaged with all regulatory and law enforcement bodies in a constructive and transparent manner and will continue to do so," according to Bloomberg.
Under EU merger rules, a company has a short window during an initial Phase 1 probe to offer remedies before regulators escalate to a deeper Phase 2 investigation.
A Phase 2 inquiry would push back the decision by roughly three months, Bloomberg said. Paramount's lawyers reportedly need to file any proposed remedies by early July, giving officials time to test the fixes before the deadline.
This merger is about building something that can realistically compete with Netflix and other scaled streaming giants.
When Paramount CEO David Ellison announced the deal in March 2026, he framed it plainly. "This is not about consolidation. It's about reinventing the business."
The combined company, as outlined in the March 2026 merger call, would have roughly $69 billion in estimated 2026 revenue and $18 billion in EBITDA, inclusive of $6 billion in projected synergies.
Leadership also targets more than $10 billion in annual free cash flow by 2030.
On the streaming side, Paramount+ grew 17% year over year in the first quarter of 2026.
Meanwhile, Warner Bros. Discovery's HBO Max surpassed 140 million subscribers at the close of the first quarter of 2026, as WBD CEO David Zaslav told investors during the company's Q1 2026 earnings call.
Combining both platforms would give the new entity roughly 200 million direct-to-consumer subscribers from day one. That is comparable in scale to Disney and trails only Netflix globally.
Paramount CEO David Ellison is waiting for regulators to complete a mega media deal.
Gilbert Flores&solVariety via Getty Images
Paramount bosses are still targeting a Q3 close. A swift EU resolution could actually push that date earlier.
The Financial Times has reported that regulators are expected to give the green light, provided the remedies are accepted.
That means the deal's fate could hinge on whether Paramount is willing to walk away from its Universal joint venture.
If it is, two of Hollywood's biggest names could formally become one before summer ends.
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