Warner Bros Discovery said on Tuesday it was considering a new bid from Paramount Skydance, without disclosing the deal's value, as the CBS owner makes a last-ditch effort to thwart Netflix's bid to buy the coveted Hollywood studio.
The latest offer is higher than Paramount's previous bid of $30 per share in cash, or $108.4 billion including debt, for the whole of Warner Bros, a source familiar with the matter told Reuters on Monday.
The offer followed a week of talks between the companies to address concerns that prompted the HBO parent to reject previous Paramount bids in favor of Netflix's $27.75-per-share, or $82.7 billion, deal for its studio and streaming assets.
"The Netflix merger agreement remains in effect, and the Board continues to recommend in favor of the Netflix transaction," Warner Bros said in a statement.
Netflix and Paramount did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Shares of the three companies were up between 0.4% and 0.6% in premarket trading.
MoffettNathanson analysts have said an offer in the range of $34 per share from Paramount would end the bidding war and "avoid further debate over Discovery Global's value."
Discovery Global could fetch between $1.33 per share and $6.86 a share, according to Warner Bros estimates.
If Warner Bros decides the new Paramount bid is superior to the Netflix deal, the streaming pioneer will have four days to respond, according to the agreement announced in December.
High-stakes battle for Hollywood's crown jewel
Either deal will reshape Hollywood's power structure by giving the suitor one of the industry's most coveted studios and an extensive content library, along with major franchises such as "Game of Thrones," "Harry Potter," and DC Comics.
Netflix has ample cash and could raise its offer for the owner of HBO Max. The company has argued that its deal offers better value to investors, in part because it included a spin-off of Warner Bros. cable assets before the acquisition.
Paramount, which has offered to buy the whole of Warner Bros, including the TV assets, believes that the cable assets are almost worthless.
The CBS owner, led by CEO David Ellison, believes it has a clearer path to US regulatory approval for a Warner Bros deal because of its close ties to the Trump administration.
To reassure investors, it has offered to cover the $2.8 billion fee Warner Bros would owe Netflix if that deal is scrapped and to pay roughly $650 million more in cash for each quarter the deal fails to close after this year.
Warner Bros' renewed talks with Paramount also follow pressure from Ancora Capital, which built a roughly $200 million stake in the HBO owner and accused the company of failing to adequately engage with Paramount.
The investor criticized the Warner Bros board for agreeing to an inferior deal and gambling on an uncertain spinoff. It plans to vote against the Netflix deal if Warner Bros refuses to re-enter discussions with Paramount.
Warner Bros shareholders said earlier this month that it would hold a shareholder vote on the Netflix deal on March 20.