Top Posts
Climate activists press BP, Shell on post-peak oil...
Tesla stock plunges on Wednesday: why Elon Musk’s...
Brazil’s Ibovespa rises on polls and US data...
Europe bulletin: BoE targets non-bank risks, Arctic tensions...
Why is Netflix considering going all-cash for WBD...
Ethereum price prediction: top reasons ETH is about...
Lloyds share price rally accelerates — will this...
Salesforce stock has imploded: Is it a bargain...
Here’s why Adobe stock price has crashed and...
Atlassian stock crashes amid sustained insider sales: is...
Major Gross Profit – Investing and Stock News
  • World News
  • Politics
  • Investing
  • Stock
  • Editor’s Pick
Stock

Why is Netflix considering going all-cash for WBD assets?

by admin January 14, 2026
January 14, 2026

Netflix (NASDAQ: NFLX) remains in focus on January 14 following reports that the streaming giant is considering a significant change to its bid for Warner Bros. Discovery assets.

According to sources that spoke for CNBC’s “David Faber”, the mass media behemoth may replace the stock portion of its $27.75 a share offer and make it an all-cash transaction instead.

Note that Netflix stock is currently trading nearly 30% below its price in early December, when it first confirmed plans of buying WBD assets.

Why is Netflix suddenly interested in going all cash

The rationale behind Netflix’s shift is twofold. First, its stock had fallen below the collar, trimming the effective value of its bid by roughly 30 cents per share.

That made the offer less appealing to WBD shareholders, who were left exposed to NFLX’s market volatility.

Second, an all-cash structure dramatically accelerates the shareholder vote.

Issuing stock requires extensive financial disclosures, accounting reviews, and regulatory filings.

This could have pushed the vote into late spring or early summer, as the chairman of Warner Bros. Discovery – Samuel Di Piazza indicated in a recent interview.

By removing the stock element, Netflix can “streamline” the process, potentially bringing the vote to as early as the final week of February, according to David Faber.

And speed matters here, as Paramount is lobbying hard to derail the NFLX-WBD deal.

How a cash offer sweetens the deal for WBD

For WBD shareholders, cash is king. An all-cash bid locks in value at $27.75 per share, eliminating the risk that Netflix’s stock could slide further before closing.

It also signals confidence: NFLX is willing to deploy billions upfront rather than hedge with equity.

Beyond certainty, the accelerated timeline is a strategic advantage for Warner Bros. Discovery Inc.

A quicker vote reduces the window for Paramount to sway shareholders or mount legal challenges.

The simplicity of cash lowers transaction costs as well — sparing WBD from the heavy accounting burden tied to stock issuance.

In short, the deal becomes cleaner, faster, and more secure — a combination that strengthens Netflix’s hand and reassures Warner Bros’ Discovery investors.

Was Paramount right all along?

While there are clear strategic benefits embedded in Netflix’s potential move to an all-cash deal, the sudden change also raises a provocative question: was Paramount right all along in contesting the supposed superiority of the NFLX bid?

After all, if the streaming giant must sweeten the deal with cash, perhaps the original stock-based offer wasn’t strong enough.

Paramount has argued in court that WBD’s board favoured Netflix unfairly — despite its own debt-laden proposal.

Now, with NFLX accelerating the vote and removing uncertainty, Paramount faces a compressed timeline.

If it wants to stay in the face, it must raise its bid or address WBD’s concerns – and that too quickly.

Whether this validates Paramount’s critique or simply underscores Netflix’s determination, what’s clear is: the battle for Warner Bros. Discovery just got sharper, faster, and far more dramatic.

The post Why is Netflix considering going all-cash for WBD assets? appeared first on Invezz

previous post
Ethereum price prediction: top reasons ETH is about to rocket higher
next post
Europe bulletin: BoE targets non-bank risks, Arctic tensions rise, UK SFO probes bribery

related articles

Climate activists press BP, Shell on post-peak oil...

January 14, 2026

Tesla stock plunges on Wednesday: why Elon Musk’s...

January 14, 2026

Brazil’s Ibovespa rises on polls and US data...

January 14, 2026

Europe bulletin: BoE targets non-bank risks, Arctic tensions...

January 14, 2026

3 reasons why Tesla stock (TSLA) could be...

January 13, 2026

Goldman Sachs explains why SMCI stock price nightmare...

January 13, 2026

Microsoft vows ‘more than cheap electricity’ in data...

January 13, 2026

Europe bulletin: stocks dip on Iran fears, BBC...

January 13, 2026

Evening digest: Markets cheer softer CPI, Powell support...

January 13, 2026

Fragmentation, geopolitics, electrification signal fundamentally new metals era:...

January 12, 2026
Join The Exclusive Subscription Today And Get Premium Articles For Free

Your information is secure and your privacy is protected. By opting in you agree to receive emails from us. Remember that you can opt-out any time, we hate spam too!

Recent Posts

  • Climate activists press BP, Shell on post-peak oil finance strategy shift 2026
  • Tesla stock plunges on Wednesday: why Elon Musk’s latest move may backfire
  • Brazil’s Ibovespa rises on polls and US data as global risks weigh
  • Europe bulletin: BoE targets non-bank risks, Arctic tensions rise, UK SFO probes bribery
  • Why is Netflix considering going all-cash for WBD assets?

Editor’s Pick

Ethereum price prediction: top reasons ETH is about...

January 14, 2026

Lloyds share price rally accelerates — will this...

January 14, 2026

Salesforce stock has imploded: Is it a bargain...

January 14, 2026

Here’s why Adobe stock price has crashed and...

January 14, 2026

Atlassian stock crashes amid sustained insider sales: is...

January 14, 2026
Footer Logo
  • Email Whitelisting
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contacts
  • About us

Copyright © 2025 MajorGrossProfit.com All Rights Reserved.

Major Gross Profit – Investing and Stock News
  • World News
  • Politics
  • Investing
  • Stock
  • Editor’s Pick