The Compound and Friends - Buy or Die
Episode Date: December 19, 2025On episode 222 of The Compound and Friends, Michael Batnick and �...��Downtown Josh Brown are joined by Bill Cohan to discuss: Netflix vs Paramount in the battle for Warner Bros, record highs for US banks, the next Fed chair, and much more! This episode is sponsored by Public. Find out more at https://public.com/compound Sign up for The Compound Newsletter and never miss out: thecompoundnews.com/subscribe Instagram: instagram.com/thecompoundnews Twitter: twitter.com/thecompoundnews LinkedIn: linkedin.com/company/the-compound-media/ TikTok: tiktok.com/@thecompoundnews Public Disclosure: Paid endorsement. Brokerage services provided by Open to the Public Investing Inc, member FINRA & SIPC. Investing involves risk. Not investment advice. Generated Assets is an interactive analysis tool by Public Advisors. Output is for informational purposes only and is not an investment recommendation or advice. See disclosures at public.com/disclosures/ga. Past performance does not guarantee future results, and investment values may rise or fall. See terms of match program at https://public.com/disclosures/matchprogram. Matched funds must remain in your account for at least 5 years. Match rate and other terms are subject to change at any time. Investing involves the risk of loss. This podcast is for informational purposes only and should not be or regarded as personalized investment advice or relied upon for investment decisions. Michael Batnick and Josh Brown are employees of Ritholtz Wealth Management and may maintain positions in the securities discussed in this video. All opinions expressed by them are solely their own opinion and do not reflect the opinion of Ritholtz Wealth Management. The Compound Media, Incorporated, an affiliate of Ritholtz Wealth Management, receives payment from various entities for advertisements in affiliated podcasts, blogs and emails. Inclusion of such advertisements does not constitute or imply endorsement, sponsorship or recommendation thereof, or any affiliation therewith, by the Content Creator or by Ritholtz Wealth Management or any of its employees. For additional advertisement disclaimers see here https://ritholtzwealth.com/advertising-disclaimers. Investments in securities involve the risk of loss. Any mention of a particular security and related performance data is not a recommendation to buy or sell that security. The information provided on this website (including any information that may be accessed through this website) is not directed at any investor or category of investors and is provided solely as general information. Obviously nothing on this channel should be considered as personalized financial advice or a solicitation to buy or sell any securities. See our disclosures here: https://ritholtzwealth.com/podcast-youtube-disclosures/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I feel like you've become the acts on what could be, like, one of the biggest mergers of all time.
And I know there's a lot of people at Puck covering the story from different angles, but, like, you're, you're all over this thing.
How does it feel?
Is it exciting?
Well, you know, first of all, Josh, you probably remember, I mean, I was an M&A banker for, you know, 20 years and worked on, you know, the first, you know, Vandcom Paramount deal when I was at Lazard.
So this is a little bit of history repeating itself and putting back on my M&A, you know,
headphones or whatever they are to look at this.
And so, you know, we've been writing about this deal originally, you know, for years now
since Zazz, you know, decided to buy Warner Brothers discovery and figured that this day was inevitable.
And now that it's here, yeah, it's great fun.
and uh you're back in your wheelhouse back in my wheelhouse if only i were getting you know paid like
a wall street research analyst who was the axe in his stock or her stock that would be great
but that's okay money is not that important all right well listen you're getting you're getting
you're getting you're certainly getting attention and you're making noise so that's worth
something right absolutely well the puck is my go-to for this stuff and not just the stuff like
We've been, Josh and I had, had Bellany on our podcast in Los Angeles a year or two ago.
Actually, we were talking about Paramount before the Ellsons came and swooped it in.
So you guys, you guys do incredible work.
Bellany was a never Netflix guy early on.
They would never do this.
I never thought they would do this.
I think most people never thought they would do it.
They haven't done a deal bigger than $700 million in their history.
So now they're doing a deal for $90 billion.
Okay.
What was that deal?
that they even did?
I believe it was
content, somebody,
a producer of content that they wanted.
I can't remember exactly what it was.
I did write about it,
but I can't remember at the moment.
It wasn't this, for sure.
It definitely wasn't this.
All right, guys, I got my sounds.
All right.
Is that too loud for everybody?
He has COVID.
Take it easy.
Nope.
All right.
Mom cake.
Did I just press something?
You didn't hear anything?
And if you're listening to this,
by the time you see Bill out in the wild,
he will be COVID-free.
So don't worry.
He's getting over it.
All right, we're ready to go?
Give me a countdown so it feels normal.
There we go.
All right.
Whoa, whoa, whoa.
Stop the clock.
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Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the final compound and friends of the year. It's the last one?
Yes? Is this the last one we're doing? It is. We got a great show today. I'm super excited about
today's show. We have here legendary, former investment banker, current journalist, Bill Cohen,
Bill is the founding partner of Puck, a best-selling author, most recently of the book, Power Failure.
Bill is also a contributor to the New York Times, Air Mail, Financial Times, town and country, so many other publications.
And if you're a reader of Puck, you probably are reading something that Bill has found out every single day of the week at this point, it feels like.
Bill, thank you so much for joining us. We appreciate it.
Thank you, God. Thank you, Mother. Thank you for having me. It's great to be back here.
Of course, and you're remote, and just to let the viewers and listeners know,
that is because you don't like us that much.
You like us enough to pop on Stream Yard.
You don't love us.
But also, there might be a COVID situation.
Yeah, I really would have thought we were done with COVID,
but my wife got it the other day.
And, of course, surprise, surprise, she gave it to me.
And we both had vaccines in September.
But mine's a mild case.
I'm on taxed low of it.
This is too much information I know.
Yeah, yeah.
And I don't even real.
I didn't want to feel it, but I did not want to share it with you guys.
COVID is like the, uh, the Avatar movies.
We'll never actually be done with them.
Michael Monter's.
We'll never be finished.
All right.
Netflix versus Paramount, uh, to acquire Warner Brothers.
Um, if and when this thing happens, it will be one of the largest, not just media
mergers of all time.
It's up there on the list.
It's a very big dollar amount.
And there's a lot at stake here for the future.
of not just the companies themselves,
but for the consumers, for pro sports,
for Hollywood, for box office versus streaming,
for pretty much every aspect of entertainment
is in play here.
Do you view it that way?
It's as big a story as I'm building it up to be.
Well, I mean, look, it's a big M&A deal.
So from my perspective, from a Wall Street perspective,
it's a big deal.
You know, my partner's like,
Matt Bellany or Julie Alexander or Dylan Byers
probably are better at assessing sort of the Hollywood impact of this
or the impact it's going to have on consumers.
I don't know whether they might say,
oh, you know, Netflix costs you know, $15 a month
and HBO costs you $20 a month.
So we'll give you both for $30 a month instead of $35.
I mean, they might do that or they might say,
oh, we'll give them both to you for $40 a month.
know what they're going to do. But, you know, I'll let them think about that. I am just like
laser focused on this deal and the aspects of the deal and, you know, who might win and where
we are now and where it's going. And, you know, to me, it's riveting. I'm just, I'm loving it.
Me too. There are the personalities that that are the center of this. Of course, Zaz being a big
part of this and the fortune that he's going to make, whichever deal happens, he's going to do very
well for himself.
Could Warner, the studio, streamer, and the linear network survive?
Like, was this, was the debt too much for them that they had to get a lifeline that they
are now going to get from either Netflix or Pan Amount?
Look, I mean, we can talk about whether or not Zad should have done the deal in the first
place and the terms under which you have to do the deal, which was the, I had to take on $55
billion dollars of debt, most of which came from AT&T.
That's a, oh man, that is a lot of debt.
But, you know, Zaz's incentive, one of the reasons he's gotten paid so much and will continue
to get paid a ton if this gets completed, which clearly looks like somebody's going to buy
it.
So, you know, he was, his incentives, he was, his reward.
Ward was to pay down this debt. So I always viewed this as sort of a publicly traded LBO
that as soon as this debt got paid down sufficiently. And, you know, he's gotten it down to
net debt of $30 billion for 55. I mean, that's pretty significant. That's not nothing.
I always figured that the equity would pop, just like, you know, even after being stagnant forever and
all the other research analysts saying, forget it. It's dead money and it's never going to work.
And everybody had sort of running away from this thing, I figured that as soon as that debt got paid down, maybe as soon as that, you know, if they got a credit upgrade, this thing would zoom.
I think they did pay down a lot of the debt, but then this process took over.
And literally, since then, the stock has gone from like, you know, this summer from seven and a quarter to 30 bucks a share.
So it's definitely been one of the better performing stocks of the year.
mostly probably because of this takeover process.
But, you know, Zaz did get this in a position to where it's quite desirable.
And that's why they're two serious suitors who want to acquire it.
When this was a single-digit stock and it was still high 40s billion dollars in debt,
I remember the narrative.
So let's say this is like late 2023.
The narrative was that there was some regulatory reason why they,
couldn't do a deal. And then that was going to come off roughly around the same time that
potentially we would have a change in the White House. Lina Khan would be gone at the FTC and there
would be a higher likelihood that a deal could actually happen. So that sort of took the stock
from the single digits to let's say the low teens. And then a lot of dominoes fell the right
way. And then all of a sudden Trump comes in and he's not a huge fan obviously.
of all of the things that are happening
on these news networks.
So it's not a slam dunk
that he's going to approve a deal
unless the suitor is somebody
that is Trump friendly
or MAGA World adjacent or something.
And then Elison, David Ellison
consummates his deal.
They now control Paramount,
the most likely merger candidate.
And it just all seems like
it's going to go according to this script.
And everybody understands
that the Ellisons are friendly with the Trumps
And they're willing to play ball, look at what they had to do to get the CBS, Viacom thing done.
But then all of a sudden, there was like a monkey wrench.
And it looks like it turns out there's another suitor.
Was that like a bolt from the blue when you saw that happen?
Did you have any heads up whatsoever that that could happen?
What was your reaction to the Netflix proposition or the news that they were even talking?
Well, I mean, I've been hearing from my sources.
that it was more than just Paramount.
Yeah, that was interested in this.
I don't think many people believe that.
I'm not sure Paramount believed it,
but I was hearing absolutely that Comcast was interested.
I mean, I've been talking about Comcast, NBCU merging with WBD, you know,
for a year and a half now,
picking up on what Tom Rogers, you know, first started talking about.
I'd heard, so my sources were telling me, Comcast, Netflix,
maybe even
Amazon
to the lesser extent
potentially Apple
so I mean I was certainly
expecting there to be
more than
just paramount
I am you know
and I figured
look you got to remember
Josh this started back in June
essentially Zaz put this into play
after April
you referenced this technical issue
after the technical issue was that you had to wait two years after a reverse Morse trust deal for there to be no tax implications of a subsequent sale.
So that was April. Okay.
Right. So that was April, you know, of this year. And so that, you know, and then in June, they decided they were going to split the company up into two pieces.
And that essentially put the company into play. Zaz recut his options at that point to,
you know, give him some incentive to get a deal done.
And then the Paramount deal closed in August, literally two weeks later, they reach out to Zaz and say, you know, we're interested in acquiring WBD.
So, you know, I began, then beginning hearing, well, you know, it's more than just Paramount here.
I know they don't necessarily want to believe it, but it's true.
And then it came out to be that, in fact, there was Netflix in a serious way.
Comcast's less so because they've got, you know, more problems than they usually.
have when there's a big deal, you know, floating around to be done. So they made a bid,
but it was, they dropped out relatively quickly. So now we're big as to be at this two-horse race
with Netflix definitely leading, but it's not over yet. When does the shareholder vote?
Okay, they haven't set a shareholder vote yet. And it's going to be after WDBD produces the
proxy statement for the Netflix deal, which is a, you know, signed merger agreement. And
That's not going to be, according to the chairman of WBD speaking on CNBC yesterday,
that's not going to be until, quote, late spring, early summer.
Oh, my God.
Yeah.
So this is.
What do you mean?
That doesn't mean, look, that whole timeline could get completely disrupted if Paramount
raises its $30 a share bid.
So other than the index funds, Vanguard, Black Rocks of the world, which are the end investors,
who are the big parties at play
that are going to be influential in determining
what the shareholders ultimately end up doing
at Warner Brothers?
Well, clearly the Warner, I mean,
there are a lot of arbitrageers now
in the WBD stock,
and it's not even clear whether those
index funds are still in it anymore.
You know, we haven't seen a recent filing
about who owns the stock.
So, but clearly it's moved into the hands of the ARBs.
And the ARBs are short-term, you know,
we haven't had a good M&A arbitrage
opportunity in years
like this. With a hostile
suitor, it almost never happens anymore.
It's got it all. I look
back and it seemed like it was not
since 2000 when
American Home Products and Warner Lambert
had a deal that was broken up by Pfizer.
So, I mean, you know, that's 25
years ago. So this is
this is a great one. This one has it all
and I'm loving it
and the arms are loving it because
you know, the stock is basically only
got to go one direction from here.
the movie, Bill, about this. Is it Peacock?
It's got to be a third party.
Yeah, got to be. Or maybe they have like a roller coaster ride at the WB, at the Comcast,
whatever it is, their, universal theme park that they have, universal theme park, right?
Bill, what did the Netflix executives who visited the White House have to say to Trump World
in order to, I'm not saying they got like a wink or a green light, but like clearly they were
very comfortable negotiating.
They remain, Josh, very, very comfortable.
And they repeated it again yesterday.
They remain very, very comfortable with their, you know, regulatory odds here,
how they feel the regulatory process is going to go.
Paramount feels like they're very comfortable with their regulatory odds.
I mean, why the heck is the President of the United States putting his thumb on the scale
of either one of these deals?
It should be relegated to their agencies or the Justice Department.
It should not be in the vicinity of the Oval Office, but, you know, we're dealing with a unique
individual here.
It's the apprentice M&A.
It's literally.
That's what it is.
Yeah.
Bill, where is the side, you know, someone's fired.
Where does the $5 billion breakup fee that Netflix will owe?
Where does that number come from?
I'm sure, I'm sure there's some sort of formula, like how does that number come about?
So, first of all, two different things here.
there's a regulatory breakup in other words if the netflix deal falls apart because it can't get regulatory approval after any number of lawsuits and law and judges rulings etc then they owe netflix owes warner brothers five point eight billion dollars okay if the same thing happened with paramount then paramount owes warner brothers if they were to go with paramount five billion dollars in the meantime there's a two point
$8 billion breakup fee that Warner Brothers will owe Netflix if they change their recommendation.
The board changes its recommendation and goes with Paramount.
And Ellison will pay for that, right?
Or whoever the buyer is.
Michael, that's a very interesting point.
One of the things that is really pissing off WBD about the Paramount bid is they have not agreed or said they were willing to.
make that breakup payment fee payment to i mean wbd has to pay that within days of switching
days of switching the recommendation not when the deal closes so days and then the question is
would paramount reimburse wbd for that in one way or another through you know a higher stock
a higher bid price or whatever and they have not agreed to do that yet so that's one of the things
that's peaving the wbd board i think i saw i forget it was the president or
Somebody came out from Warner Brothers and kind of like double down on like,
we're doing the Netflix deal.
The board is, this is what the board is urging shareholders to approve.
That was the chairman of the board.
That was the chairman of the board.
Okay.
Yeah.
I'm curious if the timing, this is like, it's not a conspiracy theory.
And there definitely, there isn't definitely a connection, but there might be.
Oracle, which is the money behind the Ellison's.
maybe not on paper, but just conceptually in everyone's mind.
It's one of the richest men on earth.
And, okay, Oracle's share price is an almost a 40% or 40% or worse drawdown from a tie.
And that's coincided with these conversations between Paramount and Netflix and Warner.
And I'm wondering if that entered the back of anyone's mind, like maybe there's not as much money there as we thought there was.
or maybe that's not necessarily the safest bet,
given the fact that the old man now has some turmoil back home
with his own share price.
Or is that just like two things that are not really related
but look like they might be?
What do you think?
I think it's the latter.
I think it's a coincidence.
Not a great one, obviously, but it is a coincidence.
Nobody has mentioned it.
I haven't heard anybody mention that.
I mean, I think that's related to their AI spending.
Yeah, yeah. It has nothing to do with, right, it has nothing to do with this.
Right. So, I mean, I think if you look at it, you know, if you look at the Bloomberg billionaires index, he's still at like $350 billion, $250 billion of which is his Oracle, his Oracle, is $1.16 billion shares of Oracle stock.
Right.
I think the, so yes, that has come down, but don't forget, it went way up.
Yes.
So I don't think it's come down as far as it went way up.
So I think he's still better off this year.
I think his net worth is up like $75 billion plus this year.
So, you know, he's doing just fine, which is, of course, more than, you know, the $40.7 or $41 billion that they've pledged in equity for this deal.
I think the bigger problem, as I've been writing about, is that for whatever reason, which I can't quite figure out, you know, the Paramount guys keep saying, you know, Larry Ellison is going to underwrite.
Larry Ellison's revocable trust is going to backstop this entire $41 billion of equity.
So don't worry about it, guys.
It's going to be fine.
The equity is there.
And the WBD board just doesn't seem to believe that.
And part of this weird technicality, and this is weird, I got to admit.
So the Paramount crowd says that the Larry J. Ellison revocable trust owns the 1.16 billion shares.
If you go to the Oracle proxy statement and you look, there is no Larry J. Ellison revocable trust.
And then if you look at their 13G filings, there is no Larry J. Ellison revocable trust.
So, I mean, maybe it's a technicality, but I got to, you know, the WB crowd is saying, hey, what's going on here?
Is there an error with the SEC filing? Is that a problem?
Or is you guys got a labeling problem?
So they are looking at Oracle's stock then.
Like, they are paying attention to that.
Well, they're looking at the proxy.
Well, who owns the stock?
Okay.
No, it's legit.
The trust is being managed by Jeffrey Epstein.
It's totally about more.
I hope they're not looking at the CDS, I guess, would be my...
Well, the current default swaps on Oracle's debt have shot up.
Yeah.
And that debt is sort of like beginning to look like junk debt, which is, you know, trading
like junk debt, which is, of course, absurd.
You know, it probably...
So maybe it is a factor.
shot up well i mean i have it could be i mean it certainly has occurred to me i haven't heard anybody
say anything about that because again he's still the second richest man in the world and
we're only talking about a mere 41 billion out of his 350 billion dollar fortune so
bill do you think that do you think that like oracle the ellison the ellison family are playing
games like if they wanted it so badly why don't they just make it and they're making it clear
but like why play games or do you think that they're being straight up and one
has already decided that Netflix is the buyer.
So, you know, now you're into the land of conspiracy theories, which I hear a lot of.
So, I mean, the Ellison crowd, the Paramount crowd feels like they are being completely
transparent about their desire to own it.
They're 30, you know, how they believe they're $30, a share all cash deal is, is superior
that they've given Warner Brothers everything they want.
Now, there's ambiguity with their $30 a share bid and how it compares to the Netflix bid
because of the value of the global network stub, the CNN-at-all stub, which you could argue
is worth more than Paramount thinks it's worth, and therefore WBD Board was right in going
with Netflix at this particular moment, okay?
But nevertheless, put that to the side for a minute.
They believe that they have been very transparent about the Ellison's backstopping this equity,
giving them everything they want,
and they don't understand why the Warner Brothers Board isn't getting that message
or feels like,
maybe it's like this thing like this technicality with the Oracle proxy.
I don't know,
but I think there's a sense among the Paramount crowd
that maybe the deal, the fix was in,
and that Zaz wanted to do the deal with Ted Serendos at Netflix,
and it's always been like that,
that he can run the streaming and studios business for Sarandos
and have a real job in Hollywood.
And he wasn't going to get a real job working for the Paramount guys,
even though they did offer him co-CEO.
Well, now that ship's sailed, Zaz knows that he's not getting it anymore.
Like, David Olson will definitely fire him.
I'm making that up.
Who knows?
But what about the aspect of the fact that there's...
He's the highest paid person in Hollywood?
No, but it wasn't actually needed a job.
No, you don't have the juice without the job.
Like, he wants, he wants the limelight.
Bill, go ahead.
He's only 65, you know, he wants to be a player.
He's going to make $550 million when this deal goes through.
Yeah.
Bill, what about the three Middle Eastern investments that would be coming in with
the Ellison to own part of a news network?
Like, that is definitely a part of the story.
Yes, but as the, first of all, they're, they're supplying $24 billion of the 41.
So that's like 60-ish percent.
It's a lot.
And I think the three of them together will be the largest shareholder in the combined company.
So that's, it was concerned that that would require Cepheus approval or maybe FCC approval because they would own CBS in effect or be the largest shareholder in a CBS CNN combination.
No board suits, but whatever.
But to fix that, to fix that, they took away their very.
voting rights and their board seats.
So now they've given it all to, you know, the Ellison's and Redbird.
So, I mean, they believe that there won't be a Scipious or FCC problem as a result of that.
But, you know, can I, can I stop you?
Can I just ask, maybe this is a stupid question?
Absent board seats and any sort of influence, what is even the point?
If you're, if you're Middle Eastern billionaires, they're investing not just for the return.
I think we all would agree.
They're investing for influence.
You wouldn't buy a golf tournament, for example, if the goal was ROI.
So what is, or is it a Trojan horse where they'll get the influence later?
The most important thing is get the equity today.
Yeah, I think that they will use some sort of soft-ish influence.
Yeah.
They will obviously have direct access to the Ellison's, and Redburn has the relationships
to begin with.
Jerry Cardnell has those relationships.
That's how the money came in in the first place.
So they're going to have access to the equity owners, whether they'll be sitting around,
you know, the board room, I guess they won't be.
You know, we all know how this sort of soft influence works.
Well, they'll decide on who's the board member.
But it doesn't even matter.
Well, there's that.
And then there's money.
Money is power.
whether you're on the board or not, like they say,
all right, well, we have another $10 billion for that other deal
that we're not going to do.
How do you like that?
Right.
Yeah, they'll have the influence they want.
Now, whether, you know, it will rise to the level of needing Sipheus or FCC approval,
obviously Paramount is hoping that it won't.
Are you surprised that the White House didn't, at least from the outside looking in,
I don't know anything that's going on internally?
Are you surprised that the Ellison deal didn't just automatically win?
because, quote-unquote, that was the most likely deal to get approved.
Does that surprise you or not really?
No, no, no, no.
I think the WBD board is number one, well-advised.
It's made up of, you know, a lot of deal guys.
And, you know, if you look at the final bid deadline was December 1st.
If you look at that final bid deadline, it really wasn't even close.
Netflix had the better deal.
on the economics, then told that they were going to lose, that's when Paramount threw in on
December 4th, their $30 a share all-cash bid.
Now, even at $30 of share all-cash bid, the WBD board deliberated and did their valuations,
I mean, with their bankers, obviously, and they decided that the 2775 Netflix bid,
plus the value of the global network stub was worth more than $30 a share.
And I think, you know, in their business judgment,
they could arguably, very definitely reach that conclusion
and no one's going to really scratch their head about it.
Because, you know, the global network's business, you know,
of course, Paramount wants that to be valued as low as possible.
So it looks like their $30 bid is the winner.
Yeah.
But so they value it at $1 a share.
Whereas, you know, Jessica Reeve Ehrlich, you know, at Merrill,
who's very reputable, you know, she valued it at $5 and then now at $3.
So at $3 a share, that plus the Netflix 2775 for studio and streaming is worth more than 30.
So bingo.
I mean, it's not really an economics alone.
I mean, there's no point in wondering about the regulatory process, especially when they both say, you know, they're equally confident that they're going to get it approved.
you go with the one that's got the better economics.
And at the moment,
you have to.
That is the Netflix deal.
Yeah.
You have a fiduciary responsibility to do that.
Right.
That's right.
And I think that, you know, Paramount's been much better at making more noise about their bid.
Netflix is quietly saying, hey, yeah, but ours is pretty good.
The other thing is that the Netflix bid was exploding.
In other words, they, you know, said to the WBD board, you know, whatever it was by midnight on.
Yeah, buy or die.
Yeah.
Exactly. And I think they said, okay, this bid is higher. It's given us, you know, more of what we wanted in terms of the contract.
They're as confident about their regulatory approval as Paragon is. And it's exploding, even if people don't believe it was going to explode, you know, debate whether exploding bids ever explode, but whatever. They didn't want to lose it. And so I think they did what was absolutely the only thing they could do at that moment.
Bill, I want to zoom out for a second and rewind back to pre-COVID days.
When Netflix was already a behemoth, the streaming war was definitely raging.
It was not over at all.
And we have a chart showing Netflix's You Can Revenue, so the U.S. and Canada.
And it was creeping higher as a percentage of domestic box office.
So in 2017, it was 0.6X.
And then it was 0.7 the next year and 0.9 the next year.
And then COVID happened.
And it just absolutely buried the theater industry.
Of course, the movie theater was basically close to the entire year.
It shot up to 5.4x.
And then it has since come down, but it has normalized at around 2x.
So Netflix is doing just in the U.S. and Canada, 2x the amount of box office revenue.
So Netflix already won.
So that's why I and so many others were shocked.
we understand why Paramount really needs these assets.
If Paramount doesn't have it, and we'll talk about that, where they land after this deal
goes through ostensibly to Netflix, and again, it's still up in the air.
But I was surprised, why do you think, and everyone's saying, well, it's YouTube.
Like, okay, why did Netflix do this?
I'm still scratching my head.
They didn't have to do this.
And the shareholders don't like it.
Why are they doing this?
Yeah, their shareholders clearly don't like it.
they have an investment grade balance sheet
and after taking on $59 billion of debt
new debt to do this deal
then their balance sheet is going to be sort of on the edge
between junk credit and investment grade credit.
So, you know, they're definitely kind of upending
their company and the formula that, you know,
that has made them so successful,
made them a half trillion dollar company.
But, you know, if you look at it,
they've been upending their formulas for a long time.
I wrote a piece in Vanity Fair in 2012 before you were alive, Michael.
Oh, stop, but I know they split the business.
I remember.
They split the business.
Remember, it was the red envelope business, and then Reid Hastings was talking about
the streaming business, and he was going to split the company up that freaked out shareholders.
He had to retreat from that.
It was a big disaster.
Of course, he was absolutely right, right, because streaming is obviously very powerful for us.
It was a good bank, bad bank.
It was.
But you had to retreat from that.
And I did a whole story about how, you know,
Reed was in the doghouse and he was, you know,
stepping on his, you know, committing hair and carry, et cetera.
So, you know, and then, you know,
they said they weren't going to do sports.
And now they're into sports.
They said they weren't going to have advertising.
Now they're into advertising.
So essentially, a lot of things that they said they would never do,
you know, they are doing.
They said they would never buy.
Never until.
never until it makes sense right always and you know if you can get access to the warner brothers
library and the HBO max content you know and you've got netflix you've got this streaming business
that you know if you put them together has like 450 million subscribers i mean hello you know game
over which is why elizabeth warren and others are like on the warp app you know against this
deal uh and of course the fact that elizabeth warren is against it will probably mean
it gets approved just because Trump wants to stick a stick in the eye of Elizabeth Warren.
But, you know, so, I mean, but I do think, that is an important point.
I do think there is a limit to how far Netflix is going to go.
I think they're smart guys.
I think they are near or at their limit.
I don't think they want to get into a bidding war with the second richest man in the world.
So I think there's also a scenario soon.
In other words, if Paramount raises its bid to, say, $34 in cash, as I suggested, they should the other day, and that would make, you know, that would be sort of game over.
I don't think Netflix would match that because that would mean they'd have to incur even more debt, and that would push them into junk territory, that would piss off their shareholders even more.
What they could do at that point is take their $2.8 billion breakup fee, get some sort of.
long-term supply contract with Paramount Warner Brothers Discovery and be as happy as ever.
They won.
But then they also drive their competitor to spend even more.
Exactly.
So maybe they thought it's a win-win.
Which is exactly what Comcast did with Disney in the Fox, a Hollywood asset.
So maybe it's they won, we lost next, right?
As Barry Diller said, back on that deal that I worked on, that Paramount Viacom deal,
back in the late 80s, early 90s,
where QVC lost and Barry Diller said exactly
that they won, we lost next.
Yeah.
And I think Netflix is in a position
to soon declare victory here.
They will have gotten Paramount to pay up.
They will have gotten a breakup fee.
And if they can get this long-term supply agreement
with this Paramount Warner Brothers Discovery,
then it's a win-win-win.
And their share price goes up
because they're not pissing up.
their shareholders anymore, and they go, you know, continue on the Netflix rampage.
Let's imagine, uh, let's imagine, uh, let's imagine you're on Kalshi and you have to make a bet.
Uh, we'll show you, we'll show you the betting odds, but, yeah, okay, no, that's stale.
I saw that. Oh, okay. And, and I just think that's totally wrong, by the way.
What did you, wait, what did you see that you think is totally wrong. Hold on, Bill, what we have
in the doc, that's stale. I wanted to show you. Oh, yeah, that's still. That's not live, but that just
shows that Netflix wasn't even in the picture.
So I don't know what it is right now.
I don't know if Paramount's in the lead or not, but it's pretty close.
Okay.
Because that's, that to me said that Netflix is going to win by 100%.
But I don't, that's clearly not.
Where would you put the odds or, I don't know, what percentage would you ascribe to Paramount
being the buyer versus Netflix?
What do you think?
What I've been saying, Josh, is 55, 45, 45.
I think Paramount, the odds are 55% that Paramount raises their bid in ways.
So I agree with you.
I think that you're right.
To the extent that we're speculating, I think it's unlikely that Netflix is going to come over the top.
Those are smart guys.
They see their share price.
They understand the economics of this.
But on CalShe as of today, Netflix is at 72%.
Paramount is only at 25%.
And it says none before July 2027 at 7%.
But Paramount's only 25.
So, Bill, if you're a betting man, I'm just kidding.
but not bad value there.
Yeah, there's a bet to be made,
but it's not going to be by me.
Yeah, I think it's harder than that.
So I wish Matt were here to talk about this.
But the ramifications for Hollywood,
so they're both talking about synergies, okay?
And we know what synergies mean.
In the case of Netflix,
a lot of the synergies are going to come from layoffs
because there is duplicative systems.
Now, they don't have the studio, like Paramount does.
But a lot of the synergies are going to come from fees that they're licensing fees.
Not paying for content that they now own.
Exactly, which could be substantial.
But I view this, like, I would prefer this deal doesn't happen.
Who cares what I think?
I think that this is just whatever the outcome, I don't think it's great.
Tim Wu agrees with you.
So I am a movie theater going.
I went to see The Shining at Friday Night at IMAX.
I love going to the movie theater.
So Netflix buying the Warner Brothers
is not good for people like me
that love going to the movie theater.
Paramount buying the studio
is really bad for labor in Hollywood
because Paramount Studios exist
and a lot of the duplicitous roles
will be eliminated.
So which is worse.
Much higher than Netflix.
They said $6 billion.
More people they can get rid of.
Right.
Yeah.
And they already have another $2 billion
that they're supposed to cut
from the first merger.
So...
Yeah, it's a new, it's going to be a new, another new day in Hollywood, and it's already
been a rough patch for Hollywood and, um, it's one last buyer for content is a really big deal.
So if you're putting together a show or a movie, now you have one less person at the table
because.
And it's already been tough enough.
And it's already been tough enough.
Um, I think one of the problems, though, is everyone anchors to the all time high for
everything whether it's real estate or banking or whatever and i just like i i feel like tough
relative to what because it ain't never going back to 2020 2021 if you were selling content to the
streamers and if you're worried about a physical box office in person or movie theater it ain't
never going back to 2015 so like but we're all anchored to as good as it ever was yeah it's not
going back because, you know what, streaming is a very good product.
I have an 85-inch TV.
Yeah.
Exactly.
You stay on your couch, you turn it on when you want, you go to the bathroom, you go
get something to drink.
I mean, plus, you've already paid for it every month.
It's not like an additional.
Look at this chart.
We have a movie, we have a number.
What is this?
Total number of tickets sold by year.
So this peaked in 2002, and it was shrinking, I don't know, a couple of percent a year.
It was in secular decline.
And then, of course, the bottom fell out in 2020.
But even with the rebound,
and we had a relatively strong year in 2023,
it was lower in 24 than it wasn't 23.
It's going to be lower in 25 than it wasn't 24.
And it's about, I don't know,
is it two-thirds of what it was, now half maybe?
Like the Hollywood, Hollywood is upside down.
When I first got to Wall Street in the late 1980s,
I did a number of movie theater deals.
I bought all the movie theaters that Norman Lear bought
at Act Three Communications.
I did those deals.
not alone, obviously,
but, you know,
that's when movie theaters were booming.
The EBITDA margins were like 65%.
Yeah.
I mean,
they were making like 85%
EBITDA margins from the popcorn.
I mean, 50% EBITDA margins
from the ticket sales.
It was a great business.
Yeah.
And now, not such a great business.
What happens to Paramount
if the Netflix deal is consummated?
is there another app
I know there's not one other asset
that would be a consolation prize
but is there a collection of deals
A24 Lionsgate like is there
a bunch of smaller ones?
Sure they can do
they can do those things
and Rich Greenfield that
Lightshed
you know smart guy
is starting to say that they should
you know
they should buy NBCU
NBC Universal
or do some sort of joint venture
with you know Brian Roberts
and Comcast
which they were willing to do with with WBD.
So it's clearly that, you know, after spinning out Versant,
Brian Roberts is in a mode of thinking he's got to do something.
Maybe if Paramount loses, you know, he does that with Paramount.
Right.
Yeah, there are things that they can do.
I mean, you know, the thing that people are forgetting here is that I think the market
cap of Paramount is like $15 billion.
They're trying to buy something, you know,
they're trying to buy something for 180.
billion dollars and they have a market cap of 15 yeah the fish is trying to eat the whale it's
not easy to do you know well when you've got the second richest guy in the world and you've got the
sovereign wealth funds of three countries in the middle east you know you can you can begin to think
like that who does uh who does disney want to see get this deal i mean i think disney's sort of like
in its own insular world it's going to be a survivor in this no matter what you know disney's you
You know, got to deal with its succession situation, which is, you know, happening supposedly
at the beginning, you know, next month, where they're going to announce a new CEO and then,
you know, hopefully Iger will leave at the end of next year this time for good.
You know, so.
They must be rooting one way or the other.
And just to, just to flesh this out, the DC Cinematic Universe is going to go to either
Paramount or Netflix, which would Disney least.
rather see producing
the next Batman Superman films
it's head to head with Marvel
right I mean right I think they
they cannot like the fact
that that Netflix
could have 450 million
subscribers yeah
right I mean so
and then putting this content
through 450 million
subscribers is you know what Disney
have 200 million
or less yeah I mean so
you know that's
I don't think anybody, you know, none of the competitors are sort of hoping that Netflix wins
because they're going to be, you know, so dominant on the streaming side of things.
Bill, if some of the Redstone were still alive and running Paramount, what would he be doing?
And what would he think about what David is doing?
First of all, he'd be ballistic that his daughter, you know, took it away from him
and, you know, merged Viacom and Paramount and, you know, merged Viacom and CBS.
and created Paramount Global
and he never wanted
that he broke them apart
he didn't want them to be together
and would probably hate
I mean it was like a take under
right that occurred
and I think he'd be
he'd be
he'd be hating every minute of this
for sure
you know he might be happy
for his friend David Zazlov
I don't know
when they can go to Dantana together
and have you know
lobster tails or something
The chicken parm there is pretty good.
All right.
So before we put a pin in this, there's like one or two other things we wanted to do with you.
Sure.
But like I guess my final question would be if you are of the mind that Netflix loses, the stock is probably a screaming buy because there's probably a lot of arbitrage pressure on it or maybe just negative sentiment surrounding the debt dynamics that you were describing.
So a takeaway, I've recently sold Netflix.
I bought.
Michael recently bought.
I guess if that deal were to fall through because Paramount does do what you suggest and go to $34 a share and Netflix says, you know what, not worth it, pay the breakup fee, figure out a licensing deal where we can walk away with the trophy.
If that happens, Netflix could add 50 points a share.
You look at the drawdown.
It's in.
So for me, that's like the really big takeaway here.
it might be the right risk to take.
And I do it, if you believe that, I do it,
not that this is investment advice,
but I would do it sooner rather than later.
Yeah.
Or it's clear to everybody that the odds are in paramount's favor.
You know, I go back to, you know,
Bill Ackman buying a big stake in Netflix
and then selling it after that one quarter
where they lost subscribers and then the stock exploded.
Nobody's perfect.
Not his best trade.
Not his best trade.
Hold on, hold on before we move on here.
I have one last question about this deal.
So this might be a dumb question, too.
What ultimately happens?
Let's just assume that Netflix gets the deal.
What does happen to the linear networks?
Like, so the shares, so the shareholders own a different share class, but like what happens?
They'll do what they did with Versant from Comcast, right?
It'll be like a, it's own equity.
Well, it would be spun off like they did with Versen.
Yeah.
If you listen to the Versant presentations, which I did the other day, I mean, they've got all these, I mean, it's well beyond CNBC.
and MSNBC or MS now.
I mean, they've got all sorts of ideas of how to create value and get it to new businesses.
And, you know, Gunner-Widenfelds could do the same thing, or they could merge or somebody could buy them.
I mean, there was one group that was interested in buying the global networks that surfaced as part of this.
It was mentioned in the filing yesterday without a name.
I think maybe it was stars, I don't know.
But so there would be an M&A takeout opportunity for this spinoff.
Versen is coming public with no debt, almost no debt, and a lot of cash.
Yeah, what a billion of debt, I think?
Yeah, right, but relatively speaking, they're not being spun out with a lot of debt.
Right.
Whereas the Warner Bros., global networks, is going to have 15 billion of debt.
Right.
So it's got more cash flow, but it's going to definitely.
be more leveraged than versed.
So I wanted to ask you about Wall Street and the banks, because one of the more fun
storylines of this year is that you often hear Republicans come into office and talk about
deregulation, but nothing much changes.
We had real deal deregulation and not just deregulation, but like just a new feeling in
the air that more things would be possible, less scrutiny, less ballbusting.
Like, you could launch products, you could do crypto, you could, right?
So we sort of had like a little bit of a mini banking renaissance.
I think Robin Hood was one of the top three performing stocks in the S&P 500 this year.
J.P. Morgan, Bank of America, Wells Fargo City, all making record highs almost every month on the calendar,
just in a succession of higher stair step.
It feels like it's a pretty good time for Goldman and Morgan.
capital formation is happening, M&A, the IPO calendar has sprung to life.
Is that sort of the sense that you have as far as like one of the bigger stories of this year?
No, you know, absolutely.
I mean, you know, the big, the big Wall Street banks have been regulated to a relative safety zone.
In other words, they've got enough equity capital.
They don't have as much leverage.
They can't hold risky loans.
I mean, they're making money, hand over fist.
It's a real oligopoly.
I mean, J.B. Morgan Chase is going to make $60 billion of net income this year.
Goldman Sachs' stock price was in $900 a share a couple weeks ago.
I think it's tripled off its low, Goldman Sachs.
You remember, you know, when people were talking about David Solomon being on the way out,
I was like saying, I don't think so, guys.
and now the stock is has tripled.
I mean, yes, it's been a bonanza for what we consider the old Wall Street banks.
Now, some of the alternative asset managers, you know, like KKR and Blackstone and Apollo and Aries,
in other words, whose business is also booming, but people are worried about private credit,
so their stock have been hit a little bit.
I'm not sure whether that's overblown yet.
My new book is about Apollo coming out next year.
So I don't know whether we're going to see the beginnings of a private credit-led financial crisis situation or whether it's just more glory days for private credit as well.
Hard to time the launch of that book, right?
Yeah, well, hopefully, right?
At the time the book is out, then we'll have this big private credit disaster.
No, no, we don't want that.
We know why.
Yeah, that would go great.
We're all rooting for that.
Sounds good.
Yeah, of course.
Are you surprised at the jiu-jitsu or not surprised?
are you interested at all in the jujitsu that the large banks have pulled off where they
themselves do not directly make the types of loans that they had been dissuaded from
making by regulation but instead they will invest in Apollo and Ares and the like who will
then by extension make those loans it's a nice layer of fees in the middle but they're
kind of, they're getting their way into private credit and this type of lending, but they're
not getting their own hands dirty. And it sort of works for everyone in the ecosystem.
It's better. What are your thoughts?
Yeah, I mean, I think everybody's sort of getting most of what they want here. I mean,
the regulators don't want the big banks to be, the big depository institutions to be the genesis
of another financial crisis. Because then,
depositors get really hurt, as we saw, you know, basically in Silicon Valley Bank and...
Nobody actually gets hurt.
Nobody really gets hurt.
Yeah, apparently nobody really gets hurt, especially, you know, the big depositors don't, of course, get hurt.
But I think, you know, basically, Dodd-Frank has made the traditional banking system safer than it has been.
And, you know, you see, like with Apollo's deal with Citigroup, you know, Citigroup is, you know,
controlling the client, which they want to do, they're originating the loan, and then they're
immediately selling it to Apollo. Apollo, you know, as they like to say, we want, I think it's 30
percent. Now we want 30 percent of everything and 100 percent of nothing. So they want to hold 30
percent of these assets. Of course, Citigroup wants to get rid of them, sell them to Apollo.
Apollo holds 30 percent, and 70 percent goes syndicated off to other institutional investors,
and everybody's apparently happy with this.
Now, the question is, you know, like at Apollo, which owns Athene, which is an annuity, you know, they have annuance.
Insurance company.
Yeah.
Five percent or whatever it is they owe them a year.
I mean, that is an obligation that Athene owes those annuance, those retirees.
And if there's any problem with them ever paying what they owe them or anybody thinks that
they're not going to pay what they owe them,
then you're going to have a run on the bank
or a walk on the bank or whatever it is,
and we could be in a, you know, a paying position again.
But Apollo owns the banks, in this case, the insurance company.
I think, I'm sure you're writing all about this,
and this is a different, we don't have to go too deep into this,
but the insurance companies that are owned by the sponsors
that are buying all this private credit,
sponsor driven,
and the rating agencies that are not really rating agencies
that are underwriting some of the debt
and putting ratings on companies you've,
rating agencies way outside the big three,
probably outside the big 15 that you've never even heard of.
Again, I'm sure you're getting into all of that,
but bringing this back to the banks.
So our friend Michael Semblis at JPMorgan has a chart.
I like Michael.
And this is wonderful.
He basically breaks down to Josh's point,
okay, what are the economics of us making a loan to a middle market company?
What's the return on equity versus let's just make the loan to the BDC,
the sponsors of the opales of the world?
The return on equity, the default rates,
everything is way better with this.
So it's not to suggest.
that there is no risk in the system, that there isn't leverage, that there aren't bad deals.
That sort of always exists.
But I do think generally speaking, this is a cleaner structure for everybody.
It's hard to disagree with you.
And it's also more regulatory friendly.
Yeah.
So everyone, so to your point, everyone's getting what they want out of it.
Everybody's getting what they want.
Right.
You know, everybody's getting what they want and they're happy.
you know, until potentially, you know, something cracks and then everybody, you know,
runs for the hills again.
But to your point, equity investors in these companies are thinking that there's cracks
because you look at blacks on which I own, you look at Apollo, KKR, Carlisle, whatever.
All of the equities of these companies, I guess what this is the part that I like.
Okay, fine.
If Apollo makes bad deals, who gets hurt?
The equity investors in Apollo or the credit, whatever it is.
Like, I separate that from depository institutions.
And that discounting mechanism is happening in the market every day.
Every day.
Right. And, and I don't think Apollo really is making bad loans.
They're smart guys.
Yeah, they're smart guys.
So maybe this is a buying opportunity because maybe all that's over.
I think so.
Last thing.
Are you watching the Federal Reserve Apprentice season, season nine?
What are you hearing from people or what is your gut instinct telling you, which Kevin will get the job?
I mean, I don't know what they're saying on the prediction websites, but they don't know anything.
Yeah.
If I read the tea leaves, I mean, Trump likes, Trump likes a better looking guy.
So Warsh, Kevin Warsh gets it because he's a better looking.
He's right at a central casting.
Trump likes that.
Morgan Stanley, Central casting.
Yeah.
And he's going to give Trump what he wants, lower interest rates.
So he's going to go with all things being equal.
He can keep the other Kevin at the national economic or advisors, whatever the hell he is now.
And he could give the better looking Kevin the job.
I think you told us this last time you were on our podcast.
I think it was you.
Kevin Warsh is married to Ron Lauder's daughter.
Ron Lauder is, which is Revlon, is, excuse me, Estée Lauder.
D.
But that's, but he's Trump's.
best friend, not ally, but like actual friend.
So Kevin Warsh is almost de facto, like, uh, Trump's almost son-in-law.
And then, and then, and then, and then Hathfitt seemed to like, you know, be the leading
horse for a while.
But now in the stretch, you know, down at the wire, he looks like Kevin Warsh might, you know,
beat him out by a nose.
Okay.
Uh, all right.
Listen, Bill, we really appreciate this is your flu game.
So we really appreciate you, uh, you, uh, you.
You're coming on and doing the show with us.
That's okay.
I can do it.
All right.
Now, you did great, and the audience is thrilled to hear from you.
You can hear that, right?
They are enraptured.
All right.
Bill Cohen, we really appreciate it coming on.
I want to know where we can tell people to go to follow more of your content.
I know it's the dry powder newsletter.
Huck.com.
Huck.
Okay.
You're on Twitter.
And new book coming.
Okay. Do we know the name of the book yet?
I do, but I'm not quite liberty to release it.
Fair enough. I'm sure we'll have you back. I'm sure we'll have you come back on when the new book is coming out as well.
And we'll see that. All right, guys, thank you so much for watching. Thanks for listening. Merry Christmas.
We'll talk to you all very soon. Thanks again, Bill.
You know,
