Folding The Roku Channel into Fox would create a media conglomerate capable of competing for eyeballs, and ad dollars, with the best of them.
Brian Boyle
brian@thedailyupside.com
There’s a new mayor in Roku City.
On Monday, Fox Corp. announced an agreement to acquire streaming platform Roku for $22 billion, uniting two titans in the free ad-supported streaming TV (FAST) space. Not everyone is loving the news, however: Shares of Fox tumbled 15%.
Fox hasn’t been a full-fledged participant in the Streaming Wars, opting against a premium subscription service to rival the likes of Netflix and Hulu, though it does have smaller over-the-top offerings for news and sports (both of which print money as linear cable TV assets). It also has Tubi, the FAST service it acquired for $400 million in 2020; the unit began turning a profit in the second half of last year.
Roku, while largely known for its connected TV boxes, is a major FAST player in its own right via The Roku Channel. Folding The Roku Channel into the Fox empire would create a media conglomerate capable of competing for eyeballs, and ad dollars, with the best of them:
“Just [Tubi and The Roku Channel] alone, that is the second-biggest [connected TV] company by ad revenue in the US, basically second to YouTube,” Moe Chughtai, global vice president of strategy and partnerships at adtech platform MiQ, told The Daily Upside. “It would be a bigger ad business than Netflix, than Prime, than Disney, than Paramount and Warner Bros. Discovery.”
FAST and Furious: Still, a $22 billion acquisition is a big pill to swallow for a company valued at about the same amount. Fox said Monday it plans to pay with cash and new debt, citing a $12 billion loan. “They’ve been talking about setting up the balance sheet for M&A for a couple of quarters now,” Third Bridge sector analyst John Conca told The Daily Upside. “I would have thought something smaller, personally.”
Flutter told Barron’s last week that it expects to manage 100,000 bets per minute at peak times during the World Cup.
FIFA expects record revenues of $13 billion in its 2023-2026 cycle, up 72% from the previous Qatar cycle during the 2022 tournament.
Analysts at Jefferies wrote Thursday that the closure of the Tillman deal could “act as a catalyst” for more M&A in the gambling sector.
Bolloré Group, which holds 40% voting rights in Universal Music, has given a thumbs-down to a $65 billion takeover bid.
Revenue in the Entertainment division climbed 10% to $11.7 billion, with its streaming unit reporting an 88% leap in operating income.This was Josh D’Amaro’s first earnings report as CEO, and the market treated it as a coronation.Disney shares…
Billionaire Barry Diller formed IAC more than 20 years ago as a vehicle to build, grow, and profit off early internet platforms.
Oprah Winfrey will soon start recording a twice-a-week video pod after signing a multiyear deal with the tech giant Monday.
A first-quarter earnings beat last week was overshadowed by weak second-quarter guidance that suggested growing subscriber churn.
The exit came just after PIF itself last week released its five-year investment plan for its $925 billion sovereign wealth fund.
Americans are playing the most golf in decades, but capitalizing on the trend requires expert-level finesse for equipment-makers.
n the proposed deal, UMG would merge with Pershing Square SPARC Holdings, a blank-check special-purpose acquisition rights company.
Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, the Qatar Investment Authority, and Abu Dhabi’s L’imad Holding Co are all aboard, per the WSJ.
© 2026 The Daily Upside
Fox Places Big Bet on Streaming with $22 Billion Roku Deal – The Daily Upside
Leave a Comment
