New York, Feb 24, 2026, 19:02 EST — After-hours trading.
- Netflix slipped roughly 3.2% after hours. Warner Bros. Discovery edged up.
- Paramount Skydance bumped its bid for Warner Bros. Discovery up to $31 per share, throwing a wrench into Netflix’s existing agreement.
- Britain is set to bring major streaming platforms under Ofcom’s broadcasting code, expanding the sector’s regulatory landscape.
Netflix slipped 3.2% to $78.04 in post-market action Tuesday, trading between $75.08 and $78.58 during the session. Warner Bros. Discovery edged 0.6% higher, closing at $29.15.
Netflix shares slipped after the latest twist in its chase for Warner Bros. Discovery’s studio and streaming business. Warner opted to talk with Paramount Skydance, bumping up its offer to $31 a share—leaving Netflix either staring down a pricier deal or the prospect of walking away. “Choosing the ‘better’ deal is always subjective,” Morningstar senior equity analyst Matthew Dolgin said. Ross Benes at eMarketer wondered if the rising bids are about “business interests rather than ego.” (Reuters)
Paramount is tweaking its offer to boost financing certainty and deliver better terms for Warner shareholders, according to a source speaking to Reuters. The previous bid sweetened things by agreeing to cover a $2.8 billion breakup fee tied to the Netflix deal, plus tacked on a 25-cent-per-share quarterly ticking fee—essentially a payment that grows the longer the merger drags out. MoffettNathanson analysts have suggested that a $34-per-share proposal might settle things, potentially ending the dispute and sidestepping further arguments about the value of Warner’s planned cable-TV spinoff, Discovery Global. (Reuters)
Netflix is sticking to its line that any bid it makes is grounded in discipline, not emotion. In proxy-solicitation documents filed Monday, co-CEO Ted Sarandos stated the company is “willing to walk away and let someone else overpay,” characterizing Netflix’s bid as $27.75 per share, plus whatever value Discovery Global brings. (SEC)
Regulation is making its way in. On Tuesday, Britain announced plans to bring major streaming players—Netflix, Amazon Prime Video, Disney+—under Ofcom’s broadcasting code. That means new rules on content standards, accessibility, plus requirements for accurate, impartial news coverage. The government said these standards will hit platforms with more than 500,000 UK users, handing Ofcom authority to probe any violations. (Reuters)
Netflix investors face a straightforward decision: does the Warner auction mean committing more cash, or does Netflix stay out? That’s the crux, since the market’s been viewing this deal as a gauge of balance-sheet strength and execution—not just something that plays out in a single quarter.
The risk isn’t one-sided. Should Paramount’s price climb, Netflix is stuck—either it ups its own offer and absorbs the valuation blow, or it backs out, leaving investors to wonder about its next move for growth and content strategy.
Timing is another risk. Netflix could stick to its strategy, but if the fight drags on and regulators take their time, the stock may end up moving on deal chatter instead of fundamentals.
Tuesday’s trading had a jumpy feel—investors hunting for deals, but nerves weren’t far off. Shares rebounded from the session low, yet by late trade, they remained well under the previous close.
Now, eyes turn to a trio of upcoming catalysts that could shake out a firm price from all this uncertainty. Warner is slated to release quarterly results later this week, Paramount’s numbers hit Wednesday, and on March 20, Warner shareholders cast their vote on the Netflix deal. If Paramount’s offer gets labeled “superior” at any point, that sets off Netflix’s four-day countdown to answer.