EU Scrutinizes $110B Paramount-Skydance Takeover of Warner Bros Discovery Amid Foreign Funding Concerns

June 10, 2026
EU Scrutinizes $110B Paramount-Skydance Takeover of Warner Bros Discovery Amid Foreign Funding Concerns
  • Paramount Skydance’s roughly $110 billion takeover of Warner Bros Discovery is under EU Foreign Subsidies Regulation scrutiny, with a decision due by mid-July on whether to clear the deal or open a full 90-working-day investigation.

  • The European Commission is assessing whether foreign funding from international investors could unfairly distort competition in the bloc.

  • Under the FSR, the Commission can probe foreign contributions totaling at least €250 million to EU-operating companies and may impose remedies if distortions are found; a July 14 deadline frames the current decision.

  • regulators in Australia and New Zealand approved the merger, finding some competition reduction but concluding the combined group would remain constrained by other studios.

  • Paramount disclosed that the merged entity would be 49.5% owned by foreign investors, with about 38.5% equity held by three Gulf states, though these investors would have no board seats or voting rights.

  • Paramount said the three Gulf-state investors would not receive board representation or voting rights, leaving control with the Ellison family and RedBird Capital Partners.

  • Paramount argues that delaying the deal would favor tech monopolies and harm creators and consumers, urging timely regulatory action.

  • Hollywood workers have organized rallies opposing the Paramount-Skydance deal, signaling broad industry pushback.

  • The non-voting equity structure is intended to limit foreign influence and potentially sidestep CFIUS, though regulators in the UK and EU could require remedies or divestitures if competition concerns persist.

  • New Zealand’s regulator signaled it would not pursue the merger further under its voluntary clearance regime as of early June.

  • Paramount says it is engaging transparently with regulators and law enforcement, while officials have declined to comment on FSR specifics; the Commission likewise declined to comment.

  • Paramount claims approvals or non-objections from multiple jurisdictions, including Saudi Arabia, Ukraine, Serbia, North Macedonia, and several European countries, with some foreign direct investment authorities also signaling clearance.

Summary based on 17 sources


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