After asserting an almost-$83 billion deal to purchase most of Warner Bros. Discovery on Friday, Netflix’s prime brass projected calm on Monday as Paramount Skydance lobbed a hostile bid to buy all of WBD, and traders appeared to recoil on the sheer measurement of Netflix’s personal provide.
“Today’s move was entirely expected,” Co-CEO Ted Sarandos informed traders at a UBS convention, disregarding Paramount’s bid simply hours earlier. “We have a deal done, and we are incredibly happy with the deal. We think it’s great for our shareholders. It’s great for consumers. We think it’s a great way to create and protect jobs in the entertainment industry.” From Netflix’s perspective, Sarandos added, “We have a deal done, and we’re incredibly happy with the deal.”
Sarandos’s co-CEO, Greg Peters, then walked the viewers via Netflix’s three-phase plan to wring worth from Warner Bros. and HBO. If the deal goes via, he stated, Netflix would turbocharge licensing alternatives, “double down” on the HBO model, and unlock upsides from Warner Bros’ huge library of IP, which many analysts think about a “crown jewel” within the trade.
The executives’ feedback got here after traders despatched Netflix inventory tumbling down 6% within the two buying and selling classes since its Warner deal was introduced, with some analysts blasting the $82.7 billion deal as “exorbitant” and “very risky.” Netflix inventory is down greater than 20% during the last six months.
Peters acknowledged that Netflix is named a builder, not a purchaser—typically growing its personal mental property, somewhat than buying different firms’: “We haven’t done this before,” he stated. However the firm that started off lending DVDs by mail has pivoted a number of instances to grow to be the greater than $400-billion behemoth now difficult Hollywood’s order.
And it’s price noting that Netflix started streaming different firms’ content material earlier than it started producing its personal programming. Its licensing operations are nonetheless vaunted within the trade, with the well-known instance of the authorized drama Fits turning into a smash hit a number of years after it stopped airing on cable TV. As Peter put it: “Essentially, we are constantly in the business of evaluating various different licensing opportunities for titles and then trying to figure out, how do we maximize the value of that asset on our platform?” The Warner deal will simply make official what Netflix already does, day in and time out.”
Netflix’s deal announcement on Friday rattled many in Hollywood, together with creators and their unions, and movie show homeowners, whose commerce group referred to as it an “unprecedented threat” to their enterprise.
Sarandos, the manager behind the mannequin that made “Netflix and chill” a byword for the millennial courting apply of and binging exhibits and films at residence, has largely refused to launch motion pictures in theaters, besides to qualify for awards. At an occasion earlier this yr, Sarandos dismissed going to the films as “an outmoded idea for most people” and stated Netflix was “saving Hollywood” with its stream-at-home mannequin.
However on Monday he prolonged an olive department to theater homeowners, saying of theatrical releases “We didn’t buy this company to destroy that value.” “What we are going to do with this is we’re deeply committed to releasing those movies exactly the way they’ve released those movies today,” he stated at the united statesconference. “When this deal closes, we are in that business, and we’re going to do it.”
Sarandos additionally mentioned his conversations with President Donald Trump—which Bloomberg reported over the weekend started in November.
President Trump “cares deeply about American industry, and he loves the entertainment industry,” Sarandos stated. Jobs have been the president’s major concern, in line with Sarandos, who reeled off statistics exhibiting that Netflix authentic productions employed 140,000 folks between 2020 and 2024, contributing $125 billion to the U.S. economic system. “We are producing in all 50 states,” he stated. “We’ve used 500 independent production companies to make content for us, about roughly 1,000 original projects.”
Sarandos and Peters identified that Paramount’s provide would possibly entail extra job cuts, as a result of Paramount and Warner have extra overlap of their operations than Netflix and Warner. “In the offer that Paramount was talking about today, they also were talking about $6 billion of synergies,” stated Sarandos. “Where do you think synergies come from? Cutting jobs. Yeah, so we’re not cutting jobs, we’re making jobs.”
Sarandos additionally mentioned HBO, the premium cable channel turned streamer—Netflix’s former rival and inspiration. Sarandos has famously stated of Netflix that “the goal is to become HBO faster than HBO can become us,” feedback he later modified so as to add he desires “CBS and BBC” too. Now that his firm is about to grow to be HBO’s dad or mum, he stated it could actually understand its true future because the main gentle of status TV.
“They’ve been doing gymnastics to make themselves into a general entertainment brand,” Sarandos stated of HBO within the HBO Max period overseen by WBD CEO David Zaslav. “Under this transaction, they don’t have to do that anymore.”
Each Netflix co-CEOs additionally hammered a message clearly geared toward regulators who would possibly take anti-trust motion to halt the deal: The mixed firm would hardly dominate TV. The Netflix deal spins off CNN, TNT, Discovery, HGTV, the Meals Community and the corporate’s different cable channels, whereas the Paramount provide retains the cable property hooked up. Utilizing Nielsen viewership knowledge that appeared to incorporate linear TV in addition to streaming, Peters stated Netflix instructions simply 8% of U.S. TV hours; including HBO would elevate that to 9%.
“We’d still be behind YouTube,” he famous. “And we’d still be behind a combined Paramount–WBD at 14%.”
BofA Analysis’s Media & Leisure staff used a distinct metric—whole TV streaming—from Nielsen knowledge to calculate that Warner and Netflix mixed can be about 21% of the market, whereas Paramount and Netflix can be 8%. Each would nonetheless are available in behind YouTube at 28%, nevertheless.
Trump weighed in on Sunday about his relationship with Sarandos and the pending antitrust query. Saying the Netflix co-CEO is a “fantastic person,” Trump added that the Warner-Netflix market share “could be a problem.” At any fee, Trump added, uncharacteristically for a sitting president, he can be concerned in what occurs subsequent.
Sarandos completed the united statespanel by reiterating to everybody listening and watching, lots of whom have been long-term holders of Netflix inventory, that he was “excited” concerning the deal. (The query of whether or not Netflix would sweeten its bid for WBD wasn’t raised.)
“We think this deal with Warner Brothers is good for shareholders,” he stated. “We think it’s good for consumers. We think it’s good for creators. We think it’s great for the entertainment industry as a whole.”
[Editor’s note: one of the authors worked at Netflix from June 2024 through July 2025.]
