Paramount Skydance CEO David Ellison told investors Monday that the company plans to merge Paramount+ and HBO Max into a single streaming platform following its agreement to acquire Warner Bros. Discovery in a transaction valued at roughly $110 billion.
The announcement came after Netflix withdrew its bid for WBD, clearing the way for Paramount Skydance to step in. The deal, if completed, would unite one of Hollywood’s deepest film and television libraries under a single corporate structure and create a streaming service with more than 200 million projected subscribers globally.
“Our combined company will be home to many of the greatest, most recognizable and beloved franchises in the world, from ‘Harry Potter’ to ‘Top Gun,’ ‘Star Trek’ to ‘Looney Tunes,’ ‘Game of Thrones’ to ‘Yellowstone,’” Ellison said on the investor call.
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He added that the company intends to invest in the “creative engines” of both studios and position them as destinations for top-tier talent.
Scale, franchises, and the economics of streaming
The strategic logic is straightforward: scale is increasingly decisive in streaming economics. Subscriber growth across the industry has slowed in mature markets, and profitability now hinges on pricing power, churn reduction, and efficient content amortization.
By merging Paramount+ with HBO Max, the combined company can consolidate marketing, technology infrastructure, and international distribution, potentially lowering per-subscriber costs. A unified platform also strengthens bargaining leverage in advertising sales, content licensing, and sports rights negotiations.
The combined intellectual property portfolio is formidable. Warner Bros. Discovery brings the Wizarding World, DC properties, HBO originals, and a deep unscripted catalog, while Paramount contributes franchises such as “Top Gun,” “Mission: Impossible” and “Star Trek,” along with CBS programming and a significant sports footprint. The breadth allows for cross-platform exploitation — theatrical releases feeding streaming windows, spinoff series extending film brands, and bundled advertising offerings spanning broadcast and digital.
Ellison sought to reassure stakeholders that HBO’s brand equity would remain intact. “Our viewpoint is HBO should stay HBO,” he said, signaling that the prestige positioning of the premium cable network will not be diluted within a larger corporate structure. Preserving HBO’s identity is critical given its role as a quality benchmark in scripted television.
Ellison also pledged to maintain 15 theatrical releases per studio annually, or at least 30 films per year combined. That commitment is notable in an era when several studios pivoted toward streaming-first strategies during and after the pandemic.
A robust theatrical slate diversifies revenue streams beyond subscription income and supports global box office relationships. Theatrical exclusivity windows can enhance downstream streaming value, particularly for tentpole franchises. Maintaining production volume also stabilizes relationships with creative talent and exhibitors at a time when the industry is still recalibrating release strategies.
However, sustaining that output requires disciplined capital allocation. Big-budget franchise films carry substantial production and marketing costs. The company will need to balance tentpole investments with mid-budget fare and streaming originals to manage risk and cash flow.
Regulatory scrutiny and political sensitivities
The transaction is expected to face rigorous review from the U.S. Department of Justice over potential antitrust concerns, particularly in streaming, cable distribution, and national advertising markets. California Attorney General Rob Bonta has already said his office will closely examine the acquisition.
Regulators will likely assess whether the merger materially reduces competition in content licensing or concentrates too much negotiating power in a single entity. With assets spanning broadcast networks, cable channels, streaming platforms, and film studios, the combined company would hold significant influence across multiple media verticals.
The deal also introduces political dimensions. The merged entity would control prominent news brands linked to CBS and CNN. Observers have raised questions about editorial independence, especially given the Ellison family’s political connections to President Donald Trump. Any perception of influence over newsroom operations could attract scrutiny from lawmakers and media watchdogs.
Industry analysts expect meaningful cost synergies from the merger, which typically implies consolidation of overlapping departments in marketing, distribution, technology, and corporate functions. While Ellison framed the transaction as beneficial for the “creative community,” past media mergers have resulted in workforce reductions as companies pursue efficiency targets.
Employee concerns are heightened by the scale of the transaction and the debt implications. Financing a $110 billion acquisition may require asset sales, restructuring, or aggressive cost management to maintain credit ratings. Investors will watch for guidance on debt reduction plans and timelines for achieving streaming profitability.
Integration complexity is another risk factor. Merging technology stacks, aligning global licensing agreements, and rationalizing overlapping content libraries can take years. Missteps in platform migration could disrupt subscriber retention or dilute brand clarity.
The consolidation continues a broader industry pattern. The Walt Disney Company has integrated Disney+ and Hulu offerings, while other media groups have sought bundling strategies to reduce churn and increase average revenue per user.
A combined Paramount-HBO Max platform would immediately rank among the largest global streaming services, strengthening its ability to compete for premium sports rights, marquee talent, and international expansion. Its scale could also enable tiered pricing models, bundled subscriptions, and expanded advertising-supported options.
Ellison described the deal as “pro-competition, pro-consumer, and pro-creative community,” arguing that it will expand consumer choice and create a stronger production ecosystem. Whether regulators agree will determine the immediate future of the transaction.
If approved, the merger would mark one of the most consequential restructurings in modern Hollywood history — reshaping the balance of power in streaming, redefining theatrical strategy, and concentrating a vast portfolio of intellectual property under a single corporate umbrella.



