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Media's AI Pivot
17MAY

EU clears Gulf equity in Paramount deal

2 min read
14:38UTC

The European Commission cleared Paramount's acquisition under the EU's foreign-subsidies rules on 14 July, signing off on roughly $24bn of Gulf sovereign-wealth equity in the financing.

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Key takeaway

Brussels cleared the deal's Gulf financing, closing one veto point and narrowing the remaining EU risk to the competition track.

The European Commission cleared Paramount Skydance's acquisition of Warner Bros. Discovery under the Foreign Subsidies Regulation (FSR) on Tuesday 14 July. 1 The FSR, in force since 2023, lets Brussels examine whether state money from outside the EU distorts a takeover; here it scrutinised roughly $24bn of equity from the Saudi, Qatari and Abu Dhabi sovereign-wealth funds backing the Ellison-controlled bid.

Brussels ran this as one of the 'two clocks' flagged when the merger stalled on 1 July . The subsidies question and the competition question are separate reviews on separate legal tracks, and clearing the first says nothing about the second. The film-distribution remedy is still under assessment for the 22 July competition ruling.

For Gulf state investors, the clearance matters beyond this one deal. The FSR is the instrument European regulators Reach for when sovereign-fund money enters a strategic sector, and a clean pass on a headline media takeover signals how much room that capital has to buy into European-facing assets. A blocked or conditioned FSR review would have forced the Ellisons to restructure the financing itself, not merely divest an asset.

Clearance under the FSR does not settle the deal. It closes one of the specific objections a regulator could still raise, and hands the remaining risk to the competition track and the twelve-state suit filed a day earlier in San Francisco.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The European Union checked two separate things about the Paramount-Warner Bros. Discovery merger. One question was whether roughly $24bn of the money funding the deal, most of it from Gulf state investment funds in Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Abu Dhabi, gives Paramount an unfair advantage in Europe because it is backed by a foreign government rather than private investors. On 14 July, Brussels said no problem there and cleared that part. But a second, separate EU review, about whether the merger itself is bad for competition in European film and TV markets, is still ongoing and won't be decided until 22 July. One EU hurdle cleared on 14 July. The other lands eight days later.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The EU created the Foreign Subsidies Regulation specifically because ordinary merger control has no mechanism to examine whether a bidder's financing itself, rather than the resulting market structure, distorts competition. Paramount's $24bn in Gulf sovereign-fund equity triggered that separate legal test purely because of where the money came from, independent of what the combined company would do in European media markets.

That structural separation between financing-source review (FSR) and market-structure review (competition law) is why the same merger can clear one EU gate on 14 July while the other, tied to the Universal Pictures distribution-JV remedy, stays open to 22 July.

What could happen next?
  • Meaning

    Clearing the FSR track removes one of three EU-adjacent obstacles cited in earlier coverage, leaving the competition-review remedy as the sole open EU question.

First Reported In

Update #9 · State AGs sue as EU clears Paramount-WBD

MLex· 15 Jul 2026
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Causes and effects
This Event
EU clears Gulf equity in Paramount deal
The subsidies track was the one clock that could have unwound the deal's Gulf financing; its clearance removes a distinct veto point and leaves only the ordinary competition review live in Brussels.
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