
The planned $110 billion acquisition of Warner Bros. Discovery by Paramount Skydance Corp has been cleared by the U.S
. Justice Department's Antitrust Division after its findings showed it was ‘unlikely to harm competition or consumers’.DOJ clears Paramount's acquisition of Warner BrosOn Friday, the Department of Justice (DOJ) said it spent eight months evaluating how the transaction would affect streaming video services, traditional television and the film industry, weighing input from across the entertainment industry.“The extensive investigatory record reviewed by the Division suggests that the impact of the transaction will be to increase competition across the media and entertainment ecosystem, with benefits for American consumers and workers,” the Justice Department wrote in a statement.Paramount issued a statement thanking the DOJ for its review of the transaction. “We remain focused on completing the transaction as soon as possible and delivering its benefits to consumers, creators, and the entertainment industry as a whole,” Paramount said.Concerns about foreign fundsEarlier, Democratic senators raised concerns about Middle Eastern sovereign wealth funds and Chinese companies taking part in the deal. They expressed concerns about the fact that the deal involves sovereign wealth funds from Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Abu Dhabi investing in a company that would control CBS stations, as well as major cable news operations including CNN. Media reports also claimed China's Tencent would be taking part, too.Paramount said in a filing on Thursday that the “new foreign investors, which will receive only non-voting equity, will not have any ability to influence the company’s editorial decision-making.”The Federal Communications Commission has not yet approved a petition seeking approval for foreign interests, including Gulf sovereign wealth funds, to own up to 100% of the debt in the proposed $110 billion deal.DOJ's findings on the impactThe DOJ has dismissed concerns that the deal will harm Hollywood or the theatrical business as a whole. After reviewing more than 2 million documents obtained from 80 sources in evaluating the deal's impact on various segments of the entertainment industry, the DOJ concluded that a combined Paramount and HBO Max would create a stronger alternative to larger streaming services, and increase competition in a way that would benefit consumers.The department's findings emphasised that the deal is ‘unlikely to harm the traditional television business’. The report also stated that the theatrical business will similarly see more competition. Since the deal was announced, theatrical production has increased, it found.Hollywood unsureHowever, several in Hollywood - including actors, directors, writers and producers - have expressed concern that the merger would result in fewer jobs and less diversity of storytelling. Several US states, including California and New York, are preparing a lawsuit to block the deal, Reuters reported last week. California Attorney General Rob Bonta posted on X that the proposed merger of Warner Bros and Paramount “remains under investigation by my office.”