Shares of Warner Bros. Discovery slid more than 6% Wednesday after the media conglomerate — heavily reliant on its pay-TV business — recorded a whopping $11.2 billion in impairment charges, including a $9.1 billion write-down reflecting the loss of value of several of its linear television networks.
In after-hours trading, WBD shares were down to under $7.25 per share. The stock’s lowest closing price was on June 18, 2024, when it ended the day at $6.99 per share. Year to date, Warner Bros. Discovery shares were already down 34%.
As of the close of trading Wednesday, WBD’s market capitalization stood at $18.8 billion, compared with more than $50 billion following the closing of Discovery’s acquisition of WarnerMedia in April 2022.
The cratering stock, the disappointing Q2 earnings, the massive debt load and the company’s loss of NBA rights starting with the 2025 season will put more pressure on CEO David Zaslav to find a strategy — and fast — to right the ship.
“In light of industry headwinds, we have and will continue taking bold steps, like reimagining our existing linear partnerships and pursuing new bundling opportunities, with the goal to get Max on the devices of more consumers faster and at a fraction of the acquisition cost,” Zaslav said in prepared remarks about the Q2 earnings.
Last month, Warner Bros. Discovery laid off almost 1,000 employees in a new bid to pare down costs. There could be an M&A event on WBD’s horizon — similar to the deal Skydance Media negotiated that would see it merge with Paramount Global (which also operates a business weighted toward TV).
Zaslav, speaking at an investment conference this spring, said Warner Bros. Discovery will be “opportunistic” in seeking M&A deals in the next two or three years. “There are a lot of players that are losing a lot of money,” he said. “There’ll be some players that want to get out of the business, that will look to consolidate their streaming businesses with others.”
At Allen & Co.’s retreat last month in Sun Valley, Idaho, Zaslav said he was in favor of whichever presidential candidate could cut through government red tape and ease the way for M&A. “We just need an opportunity for deregulation, so companies can consolidate and do what we need to be even better,” he said.