The Justice Department said the deal is "not likely" to hurt consumers or competition. State attorneys general are preparing to sue anyway.

DOJ cleared Paramount’s $110B purchase of Warner Bros. Discovery with no conditions. States led by California are still preparing to sue to block it.

The US Justice Department has cleared Paramount Skydance’s $110 billion purchase of Warner Bros. Discovery without requiring any changes to the deal. The agency said the merger “ is not likely to harm competition or American consumers ” after an eight-month antitrust review. No divestitures, behavioural remedies, or concessions were imposed.

The deal combines two of Hollywood’s five largest studios. It joins Warner Bros. and Paramount Pictures, CNN and CBS, HBO and Paramount+, and dozens of cable networks. Paramount beat Netflix in a bidding war to acquire the company. CEO David Ellison, son of Oracle co-founder Larry Ellison, met with top antitrust officials last month to argue the merger would help Hollywood compete against Netflix, Amazon Prime Video, and YouTube.

The DOJ’s approval was expected. The Trump administration has not sought to block a single merger, preferring settlements or unconditional clearance. Larry Ellison’s closeness to Trump has drawn scrutiny but did not factor into the agency’s public reasoning.

The deal is not yet done. State attorneys general led by California are preparing to sue to block the merger on antitrust grounds. Their concerns centre on reduced competition for creative talent, fewer jobs, higher production costs, and less choice for audiences. Hollywood actors, directors, producers, and writers have also opposed the tie-up.

The DOJ rejected the argument that the merger would limit options for writers and content creators. “ Demand for creative workers and labor is correlated with the Parties’ incentives to maintain or expand output, ” the agency said. In other words, a bigger combined company would produce more content, not less.

Paramount has already been preparing for integration. The company is unifying the tech stacks behind Paramount+, Pluto TV, and BET+ onto a single backend, creating a repeatable playbook for absorbing HBO Max after the deal closes. That tech consolidation is the most operationally significant part of the merger, even if it gets less attention than the antitrust drama.

If Paramount does not close the deal by October, it faces a daily fee of nearly $6.9 million to shareholders. The state lawsuits could slow the process, but analysts say Paramount is more likely to secure government approval than Netflix would have been, given the current administration’s permissive stance on mergers.

“ This deal is pro-competitive, resulting in a stronger company better positioned to compete against dominant technology platforms, ” Paramount said. Whether combining two legacy media companies into one creates a genuine competitor to Netflix and Amazon , or simply delays the inevitable decline of traditional Hollywood, is the bet David Ellison is making with $110 billion.

Cristian Dina is the CRO at The Next Web. He has interviewed 300+ industry leaders and authored the book King of Networking, establishing hi (show all) Cristian Dina is the CRO at The Next Web. He has interviewed 300+ industry leaders and authored the book King of Networking, establishing himself as one of the most connected and respected voices in the ecosystem. At just 23 years old, Cristian was included in the Forbes 30 Under 30 2025 list, representing a new generation of tech builders, bold thinkers who move fast, build with purpose, and create real impact.