WSJ Your Money Briefing - What’s News in Markets: Paramount’s Win, Private Credit Carnage, Block Layoffs
Episode Date: February 28, 2026How did the Warner Bros. bidding war affect Netflix and Paramount stock? And why are private lenders selling off sharply? Plus, what do investors think of Block’s steep layoffs? Host Jack Pitcher di...scusses the biggest stock moves of the week and the news that drove them. Sign up for the WSJ's free Markets A.M. newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Hey listeners, your money briefing is on a break, but it will be back with more personal finance information for you in the future.
Until then, here's the news moving markets this week.
Hey, listeners, it's Saturday, February 28th.
I'm Jack Pitcher for the Wall Street Journal.
And this is What's News and Markets, our look at the biggest stock moves of the week and the news that drove them.
Let's get to it.
AI was in focus once again this week, and it feels like investors don't know what to make of the rapid
advancements in artificial intelligence models.
AI optimism has been one of the biggest drivers of market gains the past few years,
but in 2026, traders are thinking more about what threats it could pose.
That tension came to a head on Monday when everyone on Wall Street was talking about a viral
blog post from a small investment research firm that imagined an AI doomsday scenario for
white-collar workers.
Stock indexes sold off sharply Monday, an analyst pointed to the memo as a prime culprit.
By the end of the week, indexes had posted modest declines.
The S&P 500 fell 0.4%, while the NASDAQ was 1% lower,
and the Dow dropped 1.3%.
A winner has emerged in the Warner Brothers sweepstakes,
and investors on both sides are actually happy.
Netflix had previously reached an agreement to buy Warner's movie and TV studios,
as well as the HBO Mac streaming service.
But on Thursday, it said it would back away from its deal.
That was after Paramount Skydance came in with a higher offer of $111 billion for the entire company,
which Warner said was a superior deal for shareholders.
In a statement announcing it would not raise its bid,
Netflix said Warner was a quote,
nice to have at the right price, not a must have at any price.
Paramount shares soared 26% this week on the deal news.
The owner of Paramount Pictures in CBS is set to add huge properties in brands,
like CNN, Superman, and Harry Potter to its portfolio.
But Netflix shares also got a boost.
Some investors have been concerned the streaming giant was going to overpay for assets it didn't need.
A recent sell-off reversed this week, which shares ending up 22%.
Concerns are growing about private credit.
It's a fast-growing industry where investors extend large loans to companies directly
and bypass the traditional publicly traded bond market.
but it's come under scrutiny after some high-profile defaults.
Lately, investors have been fretting about how exposed private lenders are to software companies.
Software has been the worst performance sector this year,
amid concerns that AI's ability to write code will reshape the industry and increase competition.
Private equity companies bought up hundreds of software companies over the past decade,
and many of those deals were financed with private debt.
Now, concerns are starting to creep in about some of those companies,
ability to repay. Shares of the biggest private credit firms have dropped sharply this year,
and with AI concerns top of mind again this week and announcements that some of the firms are
cutting dividends, they took another leg lower. Private lender's KKR, Apollo, and Ares were among
the S&P 500's worst performers this week, dropping more than 9% each. Here's a piece of evidence
for the AI doomsday crowd and one that caught Wall Street's attention. Block, the payments company
that owns Square and Cash app.
Said on Thursday, it'll lay off 40% of its workforce.
In a letter to shareholders,
CEO Jack Dorsey alluded to new AI tools
as a reason for the cuts.
It's exceptionally rare for a company as big as block
to lay off nearly half its employees in one swoop.
But shareholders applauded the reduction in expenses,
sending block shares up 17% on Friday,
for a weekly gain of 20%.
And now you know,
What's News and Markets this week?
You can read about more stocks that moved on the week's news
and our live markets coverage on WSJ.com.
Today's show is produced by Alexis Moore
with Deputy Editor Chris Zinsley.
I'm Jack Pitcher. Have a great weekend.
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