Paramount, Skydance merger deal ends Redstone era
Skydance Media and Paramount Global agreed to merge, the companies announced late on Sunday, scripting a new chapter for one of Hollywood’s oldest studios.
The companies agreed to a two-step process in which Skydance and its deal partners will acquire National Amusements, which holds the Redstone family’s controlling stake in Paramount, for $2.4 billion in cash.
Skydance will subsequently merge with Paramount, offering $4.5 billion in cash or stock to shareholders and providing an additional $1.5 billion for Paramount’s balance sheet.
Class B, nonvoting shares of the CBS broadcast network owner, which rose more than 3 percent in trading before the bell, fell 1.8 percent at the open; Class A voting shares rose 4.8 percent.
David Ellison, the 41-year-old tech scion who founded Skydance, will become chair and chief executive of the new Paramount. Jeff Shell, former chief executive of NBCUniversal, will be its new president.
The goal of the deal is to position the “new Paramount” as a “tech hybrid, to be able to transition to meet the demands and needs of the evolving marketplace,” Ellison told financial analysts on Monday.
The deal represents the end of an era for Shari Redstone, whose father and late patriarch, Sumner Redstone, transformed the family’s chain of drive-in movie theaters into a media empire that included Paramount Pictures, the CBS broadcast network, and cable television networks Comedy Central, Nickelodeon and MTV.
“Given the changes in the industry, we want to fortify Paramount for the future, while ensuring that content remains king,” Redstone, chair of Paramount and National Amusements, said in a statement, citing a phrase her father coined.
Mountain of challenges
The merger would combine Paramount, home of such classic films as “Chinatown,” “The Godfather” and “Breakfast at Tiffany’s,” with its financial partner on several major recent films, including “Top Gun: Maverick,” “Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning” and “Star Trek Into Darkness.”
Ahead of an investor presentation on Monday, Paramount disclosed in presentation slides that the deal will produce $2 billion in run-rate savings with half of it delivered in the first year. Restructuring and integration costs will reach $1.6 billion, according to the slides.
Paramount’s 2025 revenue will reach $32.6 billion on a pro forma basis and 2027 revenue is expected to rise by 2 percent to $33.5 billion, according to the slides.
Ellison, son of Oracle cofounder Larry Ellison, stands to inherit a media company that has a mountain of challenges, as it navigates an entertainment business upended by the streaming video revolution.
Paramount has shed nearly $17 billion in value since late 2019, as its traditional television business has eroded faster than its Paramount+ streaming service could turn a profit.
‘Best-in-class’ technology
There has been tension in the executive suites. Its chief executive, Bob Bakish, was ousted in April after clashing with Redstone over the Skydance deal. He was replaced by a trio of executives who occupy the “office of the CEO,” a group that has proposed making $500 million in cuts, and exploring a possible joint venture partner for Paramount+.
Ellison pledged to bring “best-in-class” technology and modern infrastructure to Paramount+ and the free streaming service, Pluto TV.
The Paramount-Skydance deal came together after months of talks that appeared to have derailed when Redstone abruptly called off negotiations on June 11.
Reuters, the news and media division of Thomson Reuters, is the world’s largest multimedia news provider, reaching billions of people worldwide every day. Reuters provides business, financial, national and international news to professionals via desktop terminals, the world's media organizations, industry events and directly to consumers.