By saying that, you agree with me that he overpaid for obsolete assets he didn't want. He's a rich kid who's spending daddy's money because he doesn't know any better.
We agree, as we often do, for separate or distinct reasons.
I don't think this is a "rich kid". I think he is a smart kid, counseled and trained by a brilliant strategist with a huge competitive spirit. If you read about Larry Ellison's sailing competitiveness, you know that he is, well, almost ruthless in such situations. The kid has decades of experience learning from a master.
Bravo! He wanted to buy a Lamborghini, so he bought the entire factory because he can. Then he'll shut the factory down because he doesn't know anything about the car business. Rich kid spending daddy's money.
Again, he's using the biggest thing that his father gave him: business sense. Will it work? No guarantee... but his father was known for taking risks. Right now, dad is risking many billions on AI as he tries to make Oracle an AI based data system.
I owned stock in both companies. I owned Paramount and Warner Discovery. Not controlling interest, but I owned enough that I had to make a decision. In both cases, I was sent tender offers for my stock. In each case I sat down with my financial advisor and discussed the tender offer. In both cases we decided it was way more money than the stock was worth, and I would be an absolute fool to turn it down. So I sold. It's his problem. I no longer own obsolete assets. He does.
But with those obsolete assets, he got the gold-standard currency in entertainment: content and content creation structures.
No. It didn't make sense. He did the deal because he's a rich kid spending his daddy's money.
I disagree. His dad is more than just a venture capitalist here... Larry is the advisor and I believe every detail of the deal was examined by him before his son made any moves.
Netflix could see this. Anyone who's ever been to an auction has seen someone come in to bid up the price because there's someone who has money to burn. That's what the Netflix offer was about. He had no intention to buy anything other than the studio. He didn't have to buy it. He already has a licensing deal with WBD. But he made an offer with a penalty that if he was outbid, the winner would have to pay him $2 billion. That's what happened. So he made money by forcing a Ellison to overpay. He went to the white house and told that to Trump, who was so impressed that he bought Netflix stock. He didn't buy any stock in Paramount.
But Netflix has a different business model, and it does not include ancillary services or companies. The Ellison strategy is broader, more like a big net being cast over entertainment options.
All this comes down to is the fact that some on this board do not see the potential of making CBS TV something other than the oldest-leaning and ratings lagging network. That statement covers both entertainment shows and news, all of which have horrible demographics.
For over two decades, CBS tried to convince agencies and their clients that demographic targeting should include 50-65. But Broadcast TV still looks first at 18-49 because that is what advertisers seek when and if they buy network television. At the CEO levels, CBS met with the biggest agencies and advertisers and pushed adding older demos to the marketing target of those companies. Their success was, to say the least, minimal.
But broadcast TV still carries a lot of the weight of the cost of producing content that can be used on streaming services like Paramount+. And that content is a positive magnet, at least for those over 30 or so, in selling those streaming services.
Ellison reminds me of Edgar Bronfman Jr. who inherited his family's company: Seagram's. He didn't want to work in his family liquor business. He wanted to be in the music business. So he squandered his family fortune to buy his way into Warner Music and ruined what was once a successful company because he didn't know anything about the music business but had lots of family money. That's in essence what's happening here.
Before anything, the Ellison family has acute business skills. They are immersed in the possibilities of technology, or Oracle would not be so dominant in its field. The same strategies used in data software and systems are, at their core, business strategies. I think senior and junior see "the entertainment wave crashing on the beach" and they want to reassemble it the way they project the future to be.
Among rumors I have heard... from rather faithful sources... is that one of the Oracle development projects is to create entertainment entirely through AI. If that is indeed true... and it sounds like a logical synergy... that justifies the purchase all by itself.
It's bad news for CBS and all of the other broadcasting & cable parts of the company. They will become collateral damage because junior doesn't know what he's doing.
There is no proof of this... to the contrary, he seems capable and has a brilliant advisor.
Too bad for the thousands of people who work there, and too bad for the millions who watch TV. But that's what happens when rich kids spend their daddy's money to buy a seat at the adult dining table because they're too stupid and don't have the knowledge & skill to actually EARN it.
CBS already was in trouble and those jobs were shrinking as new media takes over.