Comcast President Says Company Is Better for Exploring Warner Bros. Discovery Bid Despite Low Likelihood of Success

While acknowledging the deal would’ve been an “interesting play” for global streaming scale at Peacock, Mike Cavanagh said the company has a “damn good hand” already

Mike Cavanagh, President and Chief Financial Officer, Comcast Corporation
Mike Cavanagh, president of Comcast (Comcast Corp)

Comcast president and soon-to-be co-CEO Mike Cavanagh admitted on Monday that the media giant didn’t expect that it had a “high likelihood of prevailing” in the bidding war for Warner Bros. Discovery.

“We didn’t expect that we had a high likelihood of prevailing with the deal that made sense to us. So we debated whether to bother or not. Do we want the disruption? Do we want the distraction, etc,” Cavanagh told an investor conference hosted by UBS on Monday. “But it’s our job, so we thought better to take a look and do the work and see where it leads. You never know. And so that’s what we did.”

Cavanagh noted that Comcast was not interested in stressing the company’s balance sheet, resulting in a bid that was “light” relative to competing proposals on cash.

“What we did offer was a significant chunk of equity in a combined entertainment company that would have combined universal parks, media and studios together with the studio and streaming segment of Warner Brothers, and provide to the Warner Brothers shareholders a substantial percentage of that company, and that company would have been a publicly traded, controlled subsidiary of Comcast,” Cavanagh continued. “That all fit as a proposal that made sense for us in light of the fact that we like what we’re doing, we don’t need to do anything else. Had that come to be I think it would have been an interesting play. It probably would have changed our streaming aspirations to be global streaming aspirations by necessity, but otherwise, we respect and understand the decision of the Warner Brothers board. Obviously, they prefer the certainty of high levels of cash or collared stock and not what we were willing to go to to make it happen.”

His comments come after Netflix came out on top in a bidding war for Warner Bros. Discovery, with the two companies striking an $82.7 billion deal that will see the former acquire the latter’s studio and streaming assets for $27.75 per share, which includes $23.25 in cash plus $4.50 in Netflix stock.

In addition to Comcast’s bid for the studio & streaming assets, Paramount submitted multiple bids for the entire company. The David Ellison-led media giant has since launched a hostile takeover bid valued at $30 per share, slamming Netflix’s deal as “inferior.”

More to come…

Comments