DEEP DIVE · CASE STUDY #002
The Battle for Warner Bros. Discovery: A Capital Structure Stress Test in Real Time
February 2026 | Situation: Active & Contested | WBD Shareholder Vote: ~April 2026
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
Two all-cash bids are competing for Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD): Netflix at $27.75/share ($82.7B EV) and Paramount Skydance at $30.00/share ($108.4B EV). The WBD board has accepted Netflix's lower-priced offer and rejected Paramount eight times (Variety, Jan. 7, 2026).
The question this creates: Why would a board accept $2.25/share less?
CS3 scores Netflix at 41/50 (Adequate) and Paramount at 23/50 (Stressed). The 18-point gap--spanning an entire scoring band--answers the question directly. The framework separates structural architecture from execution risk, revealing that WBD's capital structure is clean (both bids score 8/10 on architecture) but execution paths diverge sharply: Netflix faces a DOJ Second Request; Paramount faces a hostile board that has rejected it eight times.
For allocators: the case study ends with what you'd need to believe to own Discovery Global equity, what would need to go right for the Paramount bid to succeed, and what would prove both theses wrong.
|
NETFLIX CS3
41/50
Adequate
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PARAMOUNT CS3
23/50
Stressed
|
The CS3 Framework
THE MENTAL MODEL
Most M&A analysis focuses on headline price. CS3 focuses on a different question: can the capital structure support the transaction through closing and beyond? When the answer is no, it does not matter what the buyer pays--value is destroyed somewhere in the stack.
CS3 evaluates risk across five dimensions (six sub-scores), each scored 1-10. The composite (out of 50) maps to four bands: Strong (40-50), Adequate (30-39), Stressed (20-29), Fragile (below 20). Every score includes a trajectory indicator and generates a testable prediction tracked in a public ledger.
Part 1: The Event
Warner Bros. Discovery was formed in April 2022 when AT&T spun off WarnerMedia and merged it with Discovery, Inc. The combined entity inherited more than $43 billion in debt, declining cable revenues, and an unprofitable streaming business. By mid-2025, CEO David Zaslav had stabilized operations: HBO Max reached 125.7 million subscribers, gross debt was reduced to ~$35.6 billion, and the studios were recovering. The stock told a different story--WBD traded below $8 as recently as early 2025.
In June 2025, WBD announced a tax-free separation into Streaming & Studios (Warner Bros., HBO, HBO Max, DC, games) and Discovery Global (CNN, TNT Sports, TBS, HGTV, Discovery+). Discovery Global would absorb ~$17 billion of WBD's debt. The announcement included an aggressive LME: cash tender offers and consent solicitations across ~$35.5 billion of notes, funded by a $17.5 billion J.P. Morgan bridge facility.
This triggered a multi-party bidding war. Paramount Skydance made escalating offers--$19, $22, $23.50, and ultimately $30/share--between September and December 2025. On December 5, the WBD board accepted Netflix's $82.7 billion offer for Streaming & Studios. Three days later, Paramount launched a hostile tender offer for the entire company at $30/share ($108.4 billion EV). The board has rejected Paramount eight times, calling the bid "inadequate" and characterizing it as "in effect a leveraged buyout--the largest LBO in history" (WBD 14D-9, Jan. 7, 2026).
The February 11 Amendment
On February 11, Paramount filed a materially enhanced fourth amendment increasing commitment across four dimensions (Variety, Feb. 11; Reuters, Feb. 10):
Ticking fee: $0.25/share per quarter (~$2.6B over 18 months). Netflix breakup fee: Paramount funds the $2.8B termination fee WBD would owe Netflix. LME backstop: $1.5B fully backstopped. Ellison guarantee: raised from $40.4B to $43.3B, with total equity commitments of $43.6B alongside $54B of bank debt.
The escalation is systematic: with each rejection, Paramount layers billions in incremental exposure. None of this changes the CS3 score--leverage and syndication risk remain--but the cumulative commitment reveals conviction. Separately, Paramount certified DOJ Second Request compliance on February 9 and secured German clearance on January 27.
Part 2: The Capital Structure
WBD Consolidated (Pre-Event)
| Layer | Amount | Detail |
|---|---|---|
| Senior Unsecured Notes | ~$33.5B | Multi-tranche, 2026-2062 |
| Bridge Facility (JPM) | $17.5B | Committed for separation |
| Total Gross Debt | ~$35.6B | Q2 2025 |
| Net Debt | ~$29.7B | 3.3x EBITDA ($4.9B cash) |
| Adj. EBITDA (2025E) | ~$9.0B | S&S ~$3B + GLN ~$6B |
| Market Cap | ~$69B | @ ~$28/share |
WHY STRUCTURAL ARCHITECTURE SCORES 8/10 FOR BOTH BIDS
WBD's capital structure is straightforward: senior unsecured notes with a single administrative agent, no SPV isolation, no structural subordination. Cash flows reach the debt-servicing entity without material barriers. This is a Dimension 4a score of 8/10--and it applies equally to both bids because both inherit the same target structure. The complexity here is executional, not architectural.
The Planned Debt Separation
| Entity | Net Debt | 2026E EBITDA | Day-1 Lev | 2030E |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Discovery Global | $17.0B | $5.4B | ~3.1x | ~4.5x |
| Streaming & Studios | ~$10.7B | ~$3.0B | ~3.6x | Improving |
WBD values Discovery Global equity at $1.33-$6.86/share (proxy). Paramount values it at ~$1/share (Dec. 10 letter, 4.5x EV/EBITDA). Under the Netflix deal, WBD shareholders keep Discovery Global shares: total consideration = $27.75 cash + stub equity.
Discovery Global: Stress Test + Versant Benchmark
Discovery Global will carry $17B of debt on declining cash flows. We now have a live comparable: Comcast's Versant Media, a linear TV portfolio spun off in January 2026. Versant debuted at ~4.5x EV/EBITDA but has already contracted to ~3.5x--and it carries only 1.25x leverage versus Discovery Global's 3.1x+. At Versant's current multiple on $5.4B EBITDA, Discovery Global's EV is ~$19B; subtract $17B net debt and equity is under $1/share. Paramount's own analysis reaches the same conclusion.
Standalone rating likely BB to BB-. Blended cost of debt ~5.5% initially, rising to 6.5-7.0% at refinancing:
| Metric | 2026E | 2028E | 2030E |
|---|---|---|---|
| BASE CASE | |||
| EBITDA | $5.4B | $4.5B | $3.8B |
| FCF | $3.4B | $2.7B | $2.2B |
| Net Leverage | 3.1x | 3.8x | 4.5x |
| STRESS CASE (-20% EBITDA, rising refi costs) | |||
| Stress FCF | $2.3B | $1.7B | $0.8B |
| Stress Leverage | 4.0x | 4.7x | 5.7x |
WHAT THE NUMBERS TELL US
Base case: Discovery Global generates $2-3B in annual FCF but leverage rises from 3.1x to 4.5x by 2030--EBITDA declines faster than debt is repaid. Solvent but worsening, with no mechanism to reverse it. Under stress, leverage exceeds 5.5x by 2030 and refinancing at BB- rates on a shrinking EBITDA base becomes the binding constraint. Versant validates this: even at 1.25x leverage with a stronger sports/news mix, its multiple has already contracted 22% in weeks.
What you'd need to believe to own Discovery Global equity: (1) EBITDA decline slows materially, (2) the 20% retained S&S stake is monetized at $5-10B for deleveraging, AND (3) the market assigns a premium to Versant's current multiple. If any one fails, equity approaches zero.
Part 3: CS3 Applied -- Scoring the Competing Bids
Each score references CS3 anchoring criteria directly. Sub-scores for Dimensions 4a and 4b reported separately per the blending protocol.
CS3 Box: Netflix / WBD
| Dimension | Score | Trajectory & Key Driver |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Financing Certainty | 9/10 | Open. $400B+ mkt cap, A3 stable. $59B bridge. All-cash. |
| 2. Leverage Capacity | 8/10 | ~2.5x, stable. $12B+ FCF absorbs debt. IG maintained. |
| 3. Cash Flow Durability | 8/10 | +12% CAGR. 325M subs. Recurring, low churn, growing ARPU. |
| 4a. Architecture | 8/10 | Clean. Senior unsecured, single agent, no SPV. |
| 4b. Execution | 3/10 | DOJ gate. Second Request issued Jan. 16. |
| 4. Blended | 6/10 | Avg of 4a + 4b. Clean structure; DOJ-dependent execution. |
| 5. Counterparty Quality | 10/10 | Blue-chip. Proven content integration. Capacity + credibility. |
CS3 Box: Paramount Skydance / WBD
| Dimension | Score | Trajectory & Key Driver |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Financing Certainty | 6/10 | Execution-dependent. $43.3B guarantee, but $54B bank debt unprecedented. |
| 2. Leverage Capacity | 2/10 | ~7x. $87B gross debt. Near-zero pre-synergy FCF. |
| 3. Cash Flow Durability | 5/10 | Mixed. ~$12.5B EBITDA: growing streaming + declining linear. |
| 4a. Architecture | 8/10 | Clean. Same target structure as Netflix. |
| 4b. Execution | 3/10 | Hostile board. Rejected 8 times. Vote = binding risk. |
| 4. Blended | 6/10 | Same blended, opposite reasons: regulatory vs. board opposition. |
| 5. Counterparty Quality | 4/10 | Financial strong, untested at scale. $43.6B equity committed. |
What the Scores Tell Us
Both bids face the same blended Structural Complexity score (6/10) for completely different reasons. Netflix: regulatory risk (DOJ, 4b: 3/10) against clean structure (4a: 8/10). Paramount: oppositional risk (hostile board, 4b: 3/10) against the same clean structure. Regulatory risk is binary and time-bounded. Board opposition is binary but subject to shareholder override in April. Different risks, different hedging strategies, same blended score.
What would need to happen for Paramount to close: (1) shareholders vote down Netflix in April, (2) $54B syndicates where the largest prior LBO was TXU at $45B, and (3) synergies materialize fast enough to service ~$4B+ annual interest. All three must hold simultaneously.
Capital Structure as Operating Strategy
The 18-point gap quantifies something headline price cannot: the same assets are worth more inside a stronger capital structure. HBO, DC Comics, Harry Potter, Warner Bros. Studios--inside Netflix's IG balance sheet ($12B+ FCF), these franchises get invested in. Inside Paramount's 7x structure ($87B debt, ~$4B interest), they get harvested to service debt.
A franchise being invested in compounds. A franchise being harvested declines. The capital structure determines the operating strategy. This is why a $2.25/share price gap matters less than an 18-point CS3 gap.
Prediction Statements
Every CS3 case study produces three explicit predictions with dated catalysts, expected score changes, and a review date. These are logged in the public tracking ledger and graded against actual outcomes.
PREDICTIONS: WBD / NETFLIX
BASE CASE: Netflix deal closes H2 2026-H1 2027. DOJ clears with conditions (behavioral remedies, not structural). CS3 improves from 41 to 44+ as Dimension 4b moves from 3 to 7+. Discovery Global trades at 3.0-4.0x EV/EBITDA, equity stub worth $1-4/share.
UPSIDE TRIGGER: DOJ closes without challenge. 4b moves from 3 to 8. Composite 46/50 (Strong). Close accelerates to Q4 2026. WBD stock approaches $27.75.
DOWNSIDE TRIGGER: DOJ sues to block. 4b drops from 3 to 1. Composite 39/50. Timeline +12 months. WBD below $24. Paramount optionality increases.
REVIEW DATE: May 15, 2026 (post-shareholder vote, with DOJ timeline visibility).
PREDICTIONS: WBD / PARAMOUNT SKYDANCE
BASE CASE: Paramount bid fails at shareholder vote (April 2026) or syndication. WBD shareholders approve Netflix. Paramount does not close. CS3 score of 23 confirmed.
UPSIDE TRIGGER: DOJ blocks Netflix AND shareholders reject Netflix. 4b moves from 3 to 6. If $54B syndicates, composite 29-31. Still Stressed--leverage (2/10) remains the constraint.
DOWNSIDE TRIGGER: Shareholders approve Netflix in April; bid becomes moot. Or: syndication fails/reprices. Dimension 1 drops from 6 to 2.
REVIEW DATE: May 15, 2026.
Catalyst Timeline
Dated catalysts mapped to prediction statements. CS3 scores updated as each resolves.
| Date | Catalyst | Score Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Feb 11 | PSKY amended offer | No score change; commitment signal |
| Feb 20 | WBD Q4/FY2025 earnings | Dim 3 validation |
| Mar 2 | PSKY tender expiration | PSKY 4b: if less than 5%, bid dead |
| Mar-Apr | ISS / Glass Lewis recs | Both bids: 4b trajectory |
| Apr 2026 | WBD shareholder vote | PSKY 4b: 3 to 1 or 3 to 6 |
| Q3 2026 | Discovery Global spin-off | Dim 2 + 3 live data |
| H2 2026-H1 2027 | Netflix close / DOJ resolution | NFLX 4b: 3 to 8 or 3 to 1 |
Tracking Ledger
Predictions logged publicly. Ledger updated every case study, reviewed quarterly. Misses displayed alongside hits.
| Entity | CS3 | Base Case Prediction | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| WBD / Netflix | 41/50 | Closes H2 2026-H1 2027; DOJ clears with conditions | Active |
| WBD / PSKY | 23/50 | Fails at vote or syndication; does not close | Active |
BOTTOM LINE
CS3 scores Netflix at 41/50 and Paramount at 23/50. The 18-point gap--driven by leverage capacity (8 vs. 2), counterparty quality (10 vs. 4), and cash flow durability (8 vs. 5)--explains why a board accepted a lower-priced offer. Both bids inherit a clean capital structure (4a: 8/10 each) but face sharply different execution risks (DOJ investigation vs. hostile board opposition). The gap is real, measurable, and predictive.
The Discovery Global stress model, benchmarked against Versant's real-time trading, shows why the capital structure story does not end at close. And the invest-vs-harvest dynamic quantifies what headline price comparison cannot: the same assets generate different long-term value depending on whose balance sheet holds them.
What would prove this analysis wrong: The DOJ blocks the Netflix deal. Paramount's $54B syndication executes cleanly at terms that don't destroy equity value. Discovery Global's EBITDA stabilizes against the secular trend. If all three occur, Paramount's 23/50 was too pessimistic and the board's eight rejections were a mistake. We will track each catalyst, update scores, and grade these predictions at the May 15 review date.
Disclaimer: This analysis is for informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute investment advice, a recommendation to buy or sell any security, or an offer or solicitation of any transaction. The author may hold positions in securities mentioned. The Capital Stack Stress Score (CS3) is a proprietary analytical framework; scores reflect the author's judgment applied to fixed anchoring criteria using publicly available information. All predictions are logged in a public tracking ledger and graded against actual outcomes. Sources: SEC EDGAR filings; WBD 14D-9 (Jan. 7, 2026); WBD proxy statement; Paramount IR releases (Dec. 10, Dec. 22, 2025; Feb. 11, 2026); Variety; Reuters; Moody's Credit Outlook (Dec. 15, 2025); Advanced Television. Credit ratings as cited: Netflix A3 stable (Moody's); Paramount Skydance Baa3 negative (Moody's), BB+ (S&P), BBB- negative (Fitch); WBD Ba1 review for downgrade (Moody's). Verify all figures independently before making investment decisions.

