AT&T, owner of HBO and Warner Bros studios, and Discovery, home to lifestyle TV networks such as HGTV and TLC, said on Monday they will combine their content assets to create a standalone global entertainment and media business.
This report produced by Jillian Kitchener.
The streaming video industry got even more cutthroat, Monday… when U.S. telecoms giant AT&T - owner of HBO and Warner Bros studios - announced it would spin off its massive media empire to combine with the Discovery network, creating a standalone global streaming giant.
Discovery President and CEO David Zaslav will lead the proposed new company, which will merge the likes of HBO, CNN and Warner Bros.
Studios - including the Harry Potter and Batman franchises - with Discovery's trove of unscripted shows.
The name of this new company will be disclosed by next week.
It will be 71% owned by AT&T's shareholders and 29% by Discovery’s.
The deal marks the unwinding of AT&T’s $108.7 billion acquisition of U.S. media conglomerate Time Warner in 2018, where AT&T sought to create a media and telecoms powerhouse… and underscores At&t’s recognition that TV viewership has moved to streaming, where scale is required to take on the likes of Netflix and Walt Disney.
It was a costly strategy for AT&T, which - at the same time - sought to expand next generation wireless services.
Now AT&T says it will use the $43 billion proceeds from the tax-free spin-off of its media assets to pay down its more than $160 billion of debt.