The US Department of Justice has approved Paramount Skydance’s acquisition of Warner Bros. Discovery, concluding that the mega-merger poses no meaningful threat to competition or American consumers. The decision, announced on June 12, 2026, ends roughly eight months of antitrust scrutiny and arrives with zero divestitures or behavioral remedies attached.
The merger carries an enterprise value estimated between $110 billion and $111 billion, and it would combine two of Hollywood’s most storied studios under one roof. The resulting entity would control HBO, Paramount+, CNN, CBS, and a deep library of content spanning decades, potentially creating the largest theatrical distribution operation in the US and a top-five streaming service by subscriber count.
What the DOJ greenlight actually means
For David Ellison, the Skydance founder orchestrating this consolidation, it represents a massive step toward building a vertically integrated media empire. His strategy hinges on unifying two major studios and their respective streaming platforms into a single competitive force against Netflix, Disney+, and Amazon Prime Video.
Warner Bros. Discovery shareholders had already approved the acquisition on April 23, 2026. Bondholders followed with their consent around May 27, 2026. The DOJ clearance removes the biggest single regulatory obstacle in the deal’s path.











