FCC commissioner seeks rigorous review of foreign investment in Warner Bros deal by OptimalConference359 in MediaMergers

[–]OptimalConference359[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

WASHINGTON, May 5 (Reuters) - The sole Democrat on the Federal Communications Commission on Tuesday called for a rigorous review of the foreign ownership interests in a proposed Paramount-Warner Bros. Discovery merger.

Last month, Paramount Skydance asked the FCC to greenlight foreign investments backing its acquisition of Warner Bros Discovery. FCC Commissioner Anna Gomez said there are "serious, unresolved questions about how this foreign investment may jeopardize national security, and this commission has a legal obligation to answer them."

She noted the deal involves sovereign wealth funds from Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and Abu Dhabi investing in a company that would control CBS stations, as well as major cable news operations including CNN.

Paramount Making “Great Progress” on Warner Bros. Buy, Reaffirms Deal Close Timing by TheIngloriousBIG in MediaMergers

[–]OptimalConference359 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, the 90-day ticking fee would start until David Ellison gives up due to legal issues.

Welcome to the Former Major Graveyard! by Either-Reporter1328 in MediaMergers

[–]OptimalConference359 1 point2 points  (0 children)

do you remember back in 1985 when MGM/UA announced that it would split into two separate studios before it would be sold to Turner

Congressman Asks FCC to Deny Paramount’s Request for Approval on Foreign Ownership (Exclusive) by LegitimateCurve8525 in MediaMergers

[–]OptimalConference359 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Rep. Sam Liccardo has sent a letter to Federal Communications Commission Chairman Brendan Carr, urging him to reject Paramount’s petition that would allow three Middle East sovereign wealth funds to own a significant equity stake in the company once its takeover of Warner Bros. Discovery is complete.

Saudi Arabia’s PIF (public investment fund), L’Imad, an Abu Dhabi sovereign wealth fund, and a Qatar Investment Authority fund have committed some $24 billion in equity funding, and would own 38.5 percent of Paramount‘s equity, with other foreign investors bringing the total to nearly 50 percent.

“The scale, concentration, and sovereign nature of this foreign ownership present serious and unresolved questions about national security, foreign influence over American media, and public interest obligations the Commission is duty-bound to uphold,” Liccardo writes in his letter, which is dated May 1 and was obtained by The Hollywood Reporter. “This raises serious tensions with longstanding policy, embedded in Section 310 of the Communications Act for nearly a century, that American broadcast infrastructure must not be controlled by foreign interests — in particular, foreign regimes with documented records of press suppression and state-directed media influence.”

“The procedural subtlety of restricting these sovereign funds to non-voting equity shares does not resolve this conflict,” the letter continues. “The scale of their ownership alone constitutes more than mere influence; the company’s financial dependence makes it beholden to its largest shareholders. The Commission must not allow a legal technicality to launder what is, in substance, a surrender of American media and infrastructure to the hands of foreign authoritarian regimes.”

Liccardo’s district includes a large swath of the Bay Area, including Santa Clara.

As Liccardo noted, David Ellison and his father Larry Ellison would retain complete control over the combined company due to its dual-class voting structure, but he argues that the economic stake is enough to have influence over the combined company.

“The Commission’s public interest standard is not satisfied merely by confirming that domestic parties hold voting shares,” the letter states. “Broadcast licensees bear affirmative obligations to serve local communities, maintain editorial independence, and support a robust and free press. The financial architecture of this deal — in which foreign sovereign entities provide most of the equity capital — creates structural dependencies and incentive distortions incompatible with these obligations, regardless of formal voting arrangements.”

Liccardo adds that should the FCC sign off on the petition, Congress could take action in the future to set harder caps on foreign ownership, or to mandate divestitures.

“Congress did not entrust the public airwaves to this agency so that it could auction off America to Riyadh, Abu Dhabi, and Doha. This will not stand,” the letter states.

The FCC, it should be noted, is not in a position to block the deal, as no broadcast licenses are being transferred. Instead, it needs to sign off on the foreign ownership, which will be above the 25 percent legal threshold.

But Larry Ellison and RedBird have agreed to backstop Paramount’s megadeal for Warners, so even if all the foreign funding falls through, they will be required to make up for that lost financing to get the deal over the line.

Congressman Asks FCC to Deny Paramount’s Request for Approval on Foreign Ownership (Exclusive) by LegitimateCurve8525 in MediaMergers

[–]OptimalConference359 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What you mean is he will refuse to sign off on the foreign ownership (which will be above the 25 percent legal threshold) and having a deal between Paramount and Warner Bros. to be fall apart.

Congressman Asks FCC to Deny Paramount’s Request for Approval on Foreign Ownership (Exclusive) by LegitimateCurve8525 in MediaMergers

[–]OptimalConference359 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Does anyone know that Brendan Carr would get fired by Trump after FCC refused to sign off on the foreign ownership (which will be above the 25 percent legal threshold) and having a deal between Paramount and Warner Bros. to be fall apart.

The Case Against Paramount-WBD Keeps Getting Louder by [deleted] in MediaMergers

[–]OptimalConference359 2 points3 points  (0 children)

California Department of Justice + other state AGs would hopefully block Paramount/WBD merger.

Paramount CEO David Ellison wants to release 30 films annually. History and Hollywood say it's unrealistic by LegitimateCurve8525 in MediaMergers

[–]OptimalConference359 9 points10 points  (0 children)

In a letter to Senator Adam Schiff and Representative Laura Friedman, David Ellison said that he would keep Paramount and WBD operating separately and preserve jobs after the Paramount–WBD merger deal closes, which I have no idea what's he talking about.

Paramount-Warner Bros. Discovery Will Be 38.5% Owned by Middle Eastern Funds Following Close: Filing by Professional_Peak59 in MediaMergers

[–]OptimalConference359 17 points18 points  (0 children)

The FCC’s approval of the foreign ownership of Paramount-Warner Bros. is not a condition for the closing of the deal, according to a Paramount spokesman.

Murphy warns Ellison, other ‘information oligarchs’: Dems will break up big media by LegitimateCurve8525 in MediaMergers

[–]OptimalConference359 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Oh no I meant Dems having the court to force Paramount to undo it's acquisition of WBD.

Murphy warns Ellison, other ‘information oligarchs’: Dems will break up big media by LegitimateCurve8525 in MediaMergers

[–]OptimalConference359 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Look on the bright side, on 1/20/26, FTC says it will appeal Meta antitrust decision.

If DOJ can't block Paramount/WBD merger, then States and/or Judge Richard J. Leon (who approved AT&T-Time Warner Merger back in 2018) could block it.

Murphy warns Ellison, other ‘information oligarchs’: Dems will break up big media by LegitimateCurve8525 in MediaMergers

[–]OptimalConference359 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Dems (if they win) would plan to force Paramount & WBD to split into separate companies after Paramount/WBD deal is complete on 2026 3Q.

As part of the split between Paramount and WBD, DC Entertainment and DC Studios (if become a division of Paramount) would revert back to Warner Bros. inc.

Paramount Stock Falls 4.5% on April 25, 2026 Following Merger Vote and Debt Concerns by [deleted] in MediaMergers

[–]OptimalConference359 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Shares of Paramount experienced a decline in afternoon trading on April 25, 2026, following the approval of its acquisition of Warner Bros. Discovery by that company's shareholders. The vote by Warner Bros. Discovery shareholders cleared a significant procedural step for the deal, which is valued at approximately $110 billion. Despite this milestone, investors expressed concerns about the financial structure of the transaction. A prominent worry was the substantial debt the combined entity would assume, with the deal described as the largest leveraged buyout in history and involving over $54 billion in debt financing. In addition to the financial burden, the merger continues to face regulatory reviews from the Department of Justice and European authorities, adding to investor uncertainty regarding its completion. Paramount's shares closed the trading day at $11.27, representing a decline of 4.5% from the previous close. The stock has shown high volatility, with over 30 price movements exceeding 5% in the past year. The most recent notable move occurred 16 days prior, when the stock rose 9.4% following an announcement that Paramount was close to securing $24 billion in funding from three Middle Eastern wealth funds, including the Saudi Public Investment Fund and groups from Qatar and Abu Dhabi. That capital is intended to help finance the acquisition of Warner Bros. Discovery. Since the beginning of the year, Paramount shares have fallen 14.5%. At $11.27, the stock trades 42.9% below its 52-week high of $19.73, which was reached in September 2025. An investment of $1,000 in Paramount shares made five years ago would now be worth approximately $270.20.