Given Warren's portfolio, any such investment would amount to a rounding error.I read the piece and it broke absolutely no new ground aside from Buffett.
Everyone has a mistake to their name. This is the Oracle of Omaha's lone mistake.
Given Warren's portfolio, any such investment would amount to a rounding error.I read the piece and it broke absolutely no new ground aside from Buffett.
Everyone has a mistake to their name. This is the Oracle of Omaha's lone mistake.
That's pretty much it. He could afford to invest in a dying medium (newspapers) a decade ago. This is no different, he can absorb this loss and it won't in any way diminish his body of work.Given Warren's portfolio, any such investment would amount to a rounding error.
If Shari hangs on to Sumner's empire, she's absolutely setting herself up for disappointment. The world has changed. Paramount as a standalone won't survive. Stockholder value is eroding. Gotta move.
The problem here is that the obvious players for Paramount are that same 2+2=3 (or even a 2+2=22) scenario. Sure, you have a bigger company but a very good likelihood that it'll be a replay of ViacomCBS.I think people thought Shari wanted to get bigger. That's why she pushed for the re-merging of CBS and Viacom. The two companies were too small individually to compete. So the assumption was the merger would get them the scale they needed to compete in the new marketplace. Turns out that 2+2=3. The combined company is worth less than the sum of its parts. That's what happens when big isn't big enough. Once again, the competitors aren't other media companies. It's the technology companies, for whom media is just a side-venture.
The problem here is that the obvious players for Paramount are that same 2+2=3
I think that's why everything is on hold. The real money isn't speaking yet.
The other variable we aren't considering is if the government breaks up all of the big tech companies.
It would have to be all of them. They can't play favorites. All get broken up.
Not gonna happen in an election year and not gonna happen the year after if the GOP has control of the White House and/or Congress.
I thought the current GOP hates big tech?Not gonna happen in an election year and not gonna happen the year after if the GOP has control of the White House and/or Congress.
I'm just throwing it out there. Repubs have a track record of not liking big tech, so don't assume they won't break them up.
That is funny....didn't see the comment above me.I'm just throwing it out there. Repubs have a track record of not liking big tech, so don't assume they won't break them up.
On principle, though right now they and Elon have a lovefest going on. Trouble is, it throws open the doors to re-interpret anti-trust and that puts a lot of their friends in other businesses in jeopardy if/when the other guys have the ball.
Don't get me started on this. They like Elon, but Elon isn't going to buy Paramount. Paramount isn't competing with Twitter.
They hate Amazon, Apple, Google, and Facebook. They're not thrilled about Netflix either. And they hate big media.
They hate big media, and yet they also want further deregulation on the local end so a company like Nexstar could be at the "39%" cap but have up to 68% nationwide coverage with their station portfolio. And Ajit Pai tried to grease the skids in 2017 with Sinclair Broadcast Group's attempt to get Tribune.Don't get me started on this. They like Elon, but Elon isn't going to buy Paramount. Paramount isn't competing with Twitter.
They hate Amazon, Apple, Google, and Facebook. They're not thrilled about Netflix either. And they hate big media.
Guys, just start a different topic. This one is interesting enoughThey hate big media, and yet they also want further deregulation on the local end so a company like Nexstar could be at the "39%" cap but have up to 68% nationwide coverage with their station portfolio. And Ajit Pai tried to grease the skids in 2017 with Sinclair Broadcast Group's attempt to get Tribune.
But none of those companies are AT&T in 1980. There are no anti-trust violations at play here.
They hate big media, and yet they also want further deregulation on the local media end
This is more in relation to Sinclair: that company has had multiple flirtations with right-wing talking points in their station's local newscasts. They even employed a former Trump advisor to deliver "commentaries" mandated on all stations:Why do they like Nexstar & Sinclair, but not AT&T?
This is more in relation to Sinclair: that company has had multiple flirtations with right-wing talking points
I knew it was rhetorical, I answered it for anyone who thought it was literal.I was asking a rhetorical question. Thanks for playing along.
This is a near-certainty and would be the case regardless of the regulatory climate here. Any sale would have to get international approval. It also makes any theoretical timeline moot as this could drag on as long as the Activision-Blizzard merger did, which took nearly two years to consummate (mostly because of international challenges).If Paramount sells to anyone at anytime, there will be someone who will challenge it in court.