Warner Bros tells Paramount to make an offer it can’t refuse - podcast episode cover

Warner Bros tells Paramount to make an offer it can’t refuse

Feb 18, 202612 min
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Summary

The episode discusses Meta's significant multi-year deal to acquire Nvidia chips, highlighting market competition and Meta's AI infrastructure investment. It also delves into the intense bidding war for Warner Bros Discovery, with Paramount given a final week to counter Netflix's offer amidst regulatory concerns. Further topics include Christine Lagarde's planned early exit from the European Central Bank and the US offshore wind sector's legal victories and push to complete projects despite potential political hurdles from the Trump administration.

Episode description

Meta has agreed to spend billions of dollars on millions of Nvidia’s chips, and Warner Bros Discovery has reopened sale talks with Paramount. Plus, Christine Lagarde has decided to leave her post as president of the European Central Bank early, and US offshore wind companies are racing to bring projects online that can withstand Donald Trump’s efforts to cripple the industry. 


Mentioned in this podcast:

Nvidia secures multibillion-dollar Meta deal as it battles chip rivals

Warner Bros throws ownership battle open by giving Paramount a week to up its offer

US offshore wind farms try to withstand the force of Trump’s wrath

Christine Lagarde to leave the ECB before April 2027

US restaurants downsize meals to counter anti-obesity drugs and affordability crisis


Note: The FT does not use generative AI to voice its podcasts 


Today’s FT News Briefing was hosted and edited by Marc Filippino, and produced by Victoria Craig. Our show was mixed by Kent Militzer. Additional help from Gavin Kallmann. Our executive producer is Topher Forhecz. Cheryl Brumley is the FT’s Global Head of Audio. The show’s theme music is by Metaphor Music. 


Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Transcript

Intro / Opening

Today's markets move fast. Get the insights you need in 10 minutes with the Barclays Brief. A new podcast from Barclays Investment Bank. Through sharp dialogue and scenario-based analysis, our leading experts analyze key market themes each week. So, whether you're managing a portfolio or leading a business, the Barclays You make smarter decisions today. Stay sharp. Stay briefed. Find Barclays Brief wherever you get your podcasts.

Big Tech Deals and Media Merger Saga

Good morning from the Financial Times. Today is Wednesday, February 18th, and this is your FT News briefing. Two big tech giants announced a very large deal yesterday, and Paramount is getting one last chance to land Warner Brothers Discovery. Plus, the Trump administration tried to kill offshore wind projects, but companies are mounting a comeback. The industry is kind of banking on it being a lot harder to stop a wind farm that's actually producing electricity.

I'm Mark Filipino and here's the news you need to start your day. Meta will spend billions of dollars on NVIDIA chips in a multi-year deal announced yesterday. It's a big break for NVIDIA. The company is facing more and more competition from rivals like AMD, as well as customers, including Meta. The social media group is developing its own in-house hardware. Last month, Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced the company would double its AI infrastructure spending this year to a whopping$135 billion.

Yesterday's announcement sent both companies share price a little higher in after hours trading. We'll get a closer look at how NVIDIA is doing when it reports quarterly earnings next week. The saga over who will buy Warner Brothers Discovery has taken another twist. On Tuesday, the company told Paramount it has a week to make its best and final offer for a takeover or it needs to get out of the way of Netflix's agreed eighty three billion dollar deal.

We have the FT's Chris Grimes, our LA bureau chief, to discuss whether or not this will ultimately pave the way for Paramount to take control of the storied Hollywood studio. Hi, Chris. Hi there. So yeah, catch us up to speed. What has been going on? So what's been going on for months is basically Paramount has been trying to buy Warner Brothers Discovery. Warner Brothers has rebuffed multiple times, instead choosing an eighty three billion dollar bid from Netflix.

And this has made Paramount really frustrated. Warner Brothers has also expressed frustration that basically if you want the company so bad you should offer more money. And so this week, Warner Brothers finally decided to reopen Sale Talks with Paramount. And this is basically an attempt by Warner Brothers to say, put up or shut up. You've got a week. Sell us on this thing or forever hold your peace.

And how has Paramount responded? So Paramount is saying Although Warner Brothers' actions are unusual, Paramount's going to engage in good faith and constructive discussions, but at the same time they're gonna continue with their hostile bid and they are uh talking to shareholders and trying to get them to vote against the Netflix deal. Chris, uh do we have any idea what a sweetened paramount offer could look like? Because as you've mentioned, there have been quite a few offers so far.

Filing yesterday, Warner Brothers talked about how a Warner Brothers executive was contacted by a senior representative from Paramount. who suggested that Paramount could raise its offer to thirty-one dollars a share from the current thirty dollars a share. And then the the representative said it could go higher even than that.

But Warner Brothers said after that conversation, nothing happened. The fact that we're even having this conversation, Chris, does that tell you that Paramount might actually get its way? Well, I think nobody would ever really bet against Larry Ellison, uh who's the father of David Ellison, who is the CEO of Paramount and who's been pushing for all of this. This is David Ellison's dream. First he bought Paramount and now he's trying to buy Warner Brothers and have

Two of Hollywood's most legendary studios under the same roof that he controls. In the end, whatever offer Warner Brothers takes will undergo Regulatory scrutiny. Would Paramount be an easier or harder sell than Netflix on that front? Well Paramount insists that it is an easier sell to regulators because they point to Netflix's high market share in the streaming market.

They say that putting HBO, which is owned by Warner Brothers, together with Netflix, they would just have an overwhelming market share. Netflix argues that this is not a real reflection of the streaming market because YouTube is the by far the dominant streamer and so forth. There's also uh a counter argument. You would be combining two movie studios in Paramount and Warner Brothers.

But regulators are already looking at these deals. And then there are other regulatory reviews that both companies are gonna have to overcome with regulators in Europe. So this is a sticky fight. Both companies say that the other one is a bigger regulatory risk. But I think definitely there's also a a political point here. There's a belief that the Ellisons, because they're closer to Trump, may have an advantage on the regulatory front. But we'll have to see how all this plays out.

That's the FT's Chris Grimes in Los Angeles. Thanks so much, Chris. Thank you.

ECB Transition and Wind Power Hurdles

Christine Lagarde wants to leave the European Central Bank a little earlier than expected. Her term as president expires in late twenty twenty seven, but Source tells the FT that Lagarde would like to head for the exit before next April. Now it's not exactly clear when Lagarde would depart, but the source said the idea is to leave before France's elections. That way, outgoing French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Friedrich Meritz can name the next head of the central bank.

the ECB declined to comment. The FT surveyed European economists in December about who they thought would be the next head of the central bank, and they believe Spain's former central bank governor Pablo Hernandez de Cos and his Dutch counterpart, Klaus Cannot, are frontrunners. Offshore wind companies are trying to capitalize on momentum in the sector. They recently won some big legal battles after the Trump administration tried to cripple the multi billion dollar industry.

And now these companies are trying to get their projects up, running, and sustainable until US President Donald Trump leaves office. The FT's US energy correspondent Martha Muir has been covering this and joins me now. Hi Martha. So what is the latest with these American offshore wind projects? Yeah, so shortly before Christmas the industry got a bit of a nasty surprise when the administration shut down construction of five wind farms on the east coast.

Right now though, the industry is on a bit of a cautious high due to a clean sweep of legal victories which allowed them to continue building. Now these are injunctions, so the underlying cases will continue, but the stoppage was costing these companies millions per day and now they can get moving again.

The important thing to note is that these projects are really close to completion and the industry is kind of banking on it being a lot harder to stop a wind farm that's actually producing electricity and hopefully lowering customer bills than one that's just in construction. So the focus is really on getting these projects across the finish line.

Let's back up a little bit. Wha what did the Trump administration cite when trying to stop these projects and what has the industry been doing to get them back online? So the Trump administration said that the turbines could interfere with radar and that's a national security threat, um, and it could make it easier for the US's adversaries to um interfere with its intelligence systems and make it harder to kind of anticipate and block any potential attack.

The industry strongly disputes this and the the administration's evidence for this has so far been classified and they're coming under increasing pressure to share it. Um in general the strategy has shifted a bit since Trump first started messing with wind. And this is a strategy that the industry feels pretty good about. Last week I went to the biggest offshore wind conference in North America. And unless everyone had

ri you know, really good poker faces. It's just felt that the government's case regarding national security isn't that strong. Okay. So definitely uh pardon the pun, some wind in their sails here. Right. Does it seem feasible that these offshore wind companies can complete these projects by the time Trump is out of office? Yeah, so for the projects that are due to come online soon, it should be feasible and it'll certainly be a lot easier.

The rest, um, such as Empire Wind, which is due to commercialise in twenty twenty seven, could be in more danger because, you know, the administration have a few different tricks up their sleeve. Um As I said, now that they're able to continue construction again, it means that they're not burning through millions of dollars per day. But you know, there is some concern that in terms of the industry's health, in terms of investment and supply chain, things look a bit bleak.

And the states are trying to step in to prop up the industry, like with New York taking co investment in future projects and investing in ports. And you know, there are opportunities north of the border in Canada that the supply chain could find things to do on. But a lot of companies say that for the meantime they're going to be focusing on Europe, with the UK and Poland being seen as great markets and Asia Pacific.

Martha, you mentioned some tricks up the Trump administration's sleeves to to stop these projects. What would that look like and how big of an impediment would that be? So Interior Secretary Doug Bergum has said that he's absolutely going to appeal the results of the injunctions. and the underlying legal cases continue.

It's also possible that the administration could order other stop work orders. Um and it's kind of hard to say what justification they would use, but they've so far proved that they're willing to get a little creative, and so there is a kind of a sense that If they have any arrows in their sling, they will try and fire them to kind of interfere with the progress of these projects.

And on top of all of this, investors are pretty cold on offshore wind. Um Bloomberg NEF has cut its twenty thirty five forecast by eighty five percent. After Trump's election and are predicting the delay or cancellation of a hundred and fourteen billion dollars of investment. That's the FT's Martha Muir. Thanks so much, Martha. Cheers. Before we go, it looks like America's supersize me approach to food is starting to slim down.

US restaurants like PF Chang's, Olive Garden, and KFC are introducing smaller portions to get in line with evolving customer preferences. One, cheaper options because of America's affordability crisis. And two, people just aren't as hungry anymore because weight loss drugs are getting so popular.

No sign whether this will be the beginning of the end of another American staple, the to-go box. You can read more on all these stories for free when you click the links in our show notes. This has been your daily FT News briefing. Check back tomorrow for the latest business news. Då ska vi se om du kan läsa raden längst ner. fourtnox.se. Ja, du ser. Hittar du allt för att starta, driva och utveckla företag? Gör det med lunar. är 100% digital. Gör som 40 000 andra småföretag och välynar bestet.

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