Paramount sees streaming gains as company continues to pursue Warner Bros. Discovery
Paramount Skydance is betting its future on its streaming business, as gains at the media and entertainment companyβs Paramount+ platform helped boost earnings for the fiscal fourth quarter of 2025.
On Wednesday, Paramount reported $8.1 billion in revenue for the three-month period that ended Dec. 31, up 2% compared to the previous yearβs quarter. That was due to growth in its streaming business, which saw a 10% increase in quarterly revenue to $2.2 billion, as well as gains at Paramountβs filmed entertainment segment, which reported revenue of $1.3 billion,an increase of 16% compared to the previous year.
The companyβs TV media business, however, had a tougher quarter.
That segment reported revenue of $4.7 billion, down 5% compared to last year, as traditional broadcast networks continue tolose subscribers. Paramount also cited a 10% decrease in advertising, partially due to a drop in political spending and not having the Big 10 championship as it did in 2024.
Paramount reported an operating loss of $339 million, which included $546 million in restructuring and transaction-related costsattributed to its merger with Skydance last year. Diluted losses per share totaled 52 cents, compared to a loss of 33 cents during the prior year.
Chief Executive David Ellison praised the companyβs progress under his tenure, noting that investments in the film studio, original series, UFC and tech upgrades to Paramount+βs streaming platform and advertising would build momentum in the coming years.
βItβs been six months, but we really do feel good about the work the team has done to date,β he said during an earnings call with analysts Wednesday afternoon. βYou can expect that to accelerate into the future quickly.β
The company said it expects total revenue of $30 billion for 2026, which would mark a 4% increase compared to 2025. Paramount signaled the primary driver of that growth will be its streaming business, though the company also anticipates a boost from its studio segment.
Company executives declined to answer questions on the call about Paramountβs bid to acquire rival Warner Bros. Discovery.
The only mention of the ongoing fight was in Paramountβs letter to shareholders, which noted that the company was βconfidentβ in its standalone strategy and growth trajectory, but that adding Warner would be an βaccelerant to achieving these goals more quicklyβ and in a way that would be βeconomically compellingβ for Paramountβs shareholders.
Paramount submitted a higher bid Monday offering $31 a share in cash to Warner Bros. Discovery investors. Previously, the offer was $30 a share.
The company also agreed to pay $7 billion to Warner should the deal fail to clear various regulatory hurdles. That was a $2 billion increase. (The previous commitment was $5 billion.)
Paramount reaffirmed that it would cover the $2.8 billion termination fee that Warner would owe Netflix if Warner abandoned its deal with the streamer.
Paramount also said it would pay a so-called ticking fee sooner. Now, the company said it would pay an additional $0.25 per quarter to shareholders after Sept. 30 until a Paramount-Warner transaction closed. It also agreed to cover Warnerβs potential $1.5 billion in financing costs associated with a planned debt exchange offer.
Additionally, Paramountsaid it βagreed to an obligation to contribute additional equity funding to the extent needed to support the solvency certificate required by PSKYβs lending banks.β That provision was offered because Warner board members have expressed concerns that Paramount may not be able to round up sufficient financing to close such a gargantuan deal.
But the companyβs earnings β and the declines its facing in its own TV business β raised concerns about the potential Warner acquisition, John Conca, analyst at Third Bridge, wrote in an email.
βIt is becoming questionable why leadership is aggressively pursuing [Warner], a deal that would effectively double their exposure to dying linear networks while also creating even more massive integration headaches,β he said.