Warner Bros. Discovery Inc.

WBD
NASDAQFree primer · Steps 1–3 of 21Updated May 18, 2026Coverage as of 2026-Q2
TTM ROIC
7.5%FY2025
Moat
Narrow
Latest Q Revenue
$9.6B-4.1% YoYQ4 2024
Top Holder
Vanguard Group11%
Institutional
77.5%
Bull Case
The Paramount merger could create a ~200M-subscriber scaled streaming platform with sufficient content spend to compete with Netflix, implying significant embedded value versus current market price.
Bear Case
Serial integration failures and accelerating linear TV decline could overwhelm DTC growth, keeping leverage elevated and pressuring equity value materially lower.

Business Model


ticker: WBD step: 01 generated: 2026-05-13 source: quick-research

Warner Bros. Discovery, Inc. (WBD) — Business Overview

Business Description

Warner Bros. Discovery is a global media and entertainment company formed from the 2022 merger of WarnerMedia (spun out of AT&T) and Discovery Inc. The company owns some of the most iconic entertainment brands: HBO, Warner Bros. Pictures, DC Studios, CNN, TNT, TBS, Discovery Channel, HGTV, Food Network, and the Max streaming service (combining HBO Max + Discovery+). After years of post-merger restructuring and painful debt reduction, WBD announced a planned corporate split in 2025 into two public companies — "Streaming & Studios" (Max + Warner Bros.) and "Discovery Global" (legacy linear networks) — targeted for completion by mid-2026.

Revenue Model

WBD operates three segments: (1) Direct-to-Consumer (DTC) — Max streaming subscriptions + advertising tier; reached profitability in 2023, generating $677M DTC profit in FY2024; (2) Studios — Warner Bros. theatrical and TV production, DC franchise films, licensing; generates revenue from box office, licensing, and streaming fees; (3) Networks — CNN, TNT, TBS, Discovery, HGTV, Food Network; affiliate fees + linear advertising; structurally declining due to cord-cutting. Max reached 132M global subscribers by early 2026; targeting 150M by end of 2026.

Products & Services

  • Max — flagship streaming service; HBO originals + Warner Bros. films + Discovery content + live sports; 132M+ global subs
  • Warner Bros. Pictures / New Line Cinema — major studio releasing 8–12 theatrical films annually; DC, Harry Potter, franchise IP
  • DC Studios — DC Universe content strategy under James Gunn; theatrical + Max originals
  • CNN — global news network; linear + CNN Max streaming
  • TNT / TBS — general entertainment cable networks; sports (NBA rights lost after 2024–25 season)
  • Discovery / HGTV / Food Network / TLC — lifestyle and reality cable networks; cash-generating but declining
  • HBO — prestige television brand; Succession, White Lotus, The Last of Us, House of the Dragon

Customer Base & Go-to-Market

Max targets premium streaming subscribers globally, competing with Netflix, Disney+, Peacock, and Apple TV+. HBO's brand premium (prestige TV) supports higher subscriber pricing ($15–18/month). The ad-supported tier (Max with Ads) is a lower-cost entry point with strong advertiser demand for HBO's premium audience demographics. The Discovery/lifestyle networks serve older, female-skewing audiences that remain loyal linear viewers.

Competitive Position

HBO remains the gold standard for prestige television content — a durable competitive moat. Warner Bros.' franchise IP (DC, Harry Potter, Dune, The Matrix) provides recurring theatrical and streaming content. However, WBD's $34.6B net debt load constrains content investment, and the loss of NBA rights (TNT lost the NBA broadcast deal after the 2024–25 season) weakens the Networks segment. The planned corporate split is designed to isolate the high-quality streaming/studio assets from the declining linear TV portfolio.

Key Facts

  • Founded: 2022 (merger of WarnerMedia + Discovery Inc.)
  • Headquarters: New York, New York
  • Employees: ~35,000
  • Exchange: NASDAQ
  • Sector / Industry: Communication Services / Entertainment
  • Market Cap: ~$22B (at ~$9/share)

Financial Snapshot


ticker: WBD step: 04 generated: 2026-05-13 source: quick-research

Warner Bros. Discovery, Inc. (WBD) — Financial Snapshot

Income Statement Summary

Metric FY2022 FY2023 FY2024 YoY
Revenue $33.83B $41.32B $39.32B -4.8%
Adj. EBITDA ~$9.5B ~$10.0B ~$9.5B ~-5%
Net Income -$7.4B -$3.1B -$2.7B improving
EPS (diluted) -$3.20 -$1.30 -$1.10 improving

FY2022 revenue reflects partial year post-merger (April 2022 close). FY2025: First positive net income quarter achieved in Q2 2025 — turnaround milestone. Streaming subscribers reached 132M by early 2026.

Cash Flow & Balance Sheet (FY2024)

Metric Value
Operating Cash Flow ~$4.5B
Free Cash Flow ~$3.5B
Capital Expenditures ~$1.0B
Cash & Equivalents ~$4.3B
Total Debt (net) ~$34.6B

FCF is the company's strongest financial metric — WBD paid down $5.4B of debt in 2023 using FCF. Net leverage stood at ~3.9x EBITDA at end of 2023 and continues declining.

Key Ratios (approximate)

  • P/E: NM (ongoing GAAP losses improving) | EV/EBITDA: ~6x | FCF Yield: ~15%
  • Revenue Growth: -5% (cord-cutting linear segment offset by streaming growth)

Growth Profile

WBD is a deep-value, high-leverage turnaround story. Despite $34.6B in net debt — 73% of market cap — the company generates $3–4B in annual FCF, giving a ~15% FCF yield. The financial story is deleveraging: every dollar of FCF reduces the debt burden, improving the equity value disproportionately given high leverage. The planned corporate split (mid-2026) is the value unlock catalyst — separating "Streaming & Studios" (high-growth, deserves premium multiple) from "Discovery Global" (cash cow, legacy). Streaming profitability milestone achieved in FY2024 ($677M DTC profit), growing to $1B+ in FY2025.

Forward Estimates

  • Max subscribers: 132M (early 2026) → 150M target by end of 2026; international expansion key
  • Streaming & Studios split (mid-2026): potential re-rating event for the higher-quality assets
  • Net debt reduction: ~$1–2B/year via FCF; targeting <3x leverage ratio
  • Analyst median PT: ~$29.75 (6 Buy / 13 Hold / 1 Sell) — stock trades at ~$9; massive upside priced as speculative

Recent Catalysts


ticker: WBD step: 12 generated: 2026-05-13 source: quick-research

Warner Bros. Discovery, Inc. (WBD) — Investment Catalysts & Risks

Bull Case Drivers

  1. Corporate Split = Sum-of-Parts Value Unlock (Mid-2026) — WBD announced a planned split into two public companies: "Streaming & Studios" (Max + Warner Bros. Pictures + DC + HBO) and "Discovery Global" (CNN + TNT/TBS + Discovery lifestyle networks). The thesis: the market is applying a single distressed conglomerate multiple (~6x EBITDA) to assets with very different quality profiles. Streaming & Studios, if valued as a comparable to Netflix or Disney's streaming assets, could command 10–15x EBITDA; Discovery Global would trade as a mature cash-flow generator (~5–7x). The sum of the parts significantly exceeds the current enterprise value. The split, targeted for mid-2026, is the catalyst that forces this re-rating by giving investors the ability to own each asset class separately.

  2. Max at 132M Subscribers + Streaming Profitability Milestone — Max reached 132M global subscribers by early 2026, up from 117M at end of 2024, tracking toward management's 150M target by end of 2026. Crucially, the DTC segment delivered $677M in profit in FY2024 (vs. a $2.1B loss in FY2022) — the streaming business has crossed the profitability threshold. HBO's prestige content flywheel (White Lotus Season 3, The Last of Us Season 2, House of the Dragon) drives subscriber adds and reduces churn. International expansion into Germany, Italy, UK, and Ireland in 2026 provides a significant subscriber growth runway. A profitable streaming service at 130–150M subscribers is fundamentally different from the loss-making startup that weighed on WBD's valuation for years.

  3. ~15% FCF Yield + Accelerating Debt Reduction = Asymmetric Equity Value — WBD generates $3–4B in annual FCF against a market cap of ~$22B — a ~15% FCF yield that is extraordinary for a company with these brand assets. Every $1B of debt reduction on $34.6B net debt disproportionately benefits equity holders given the leverage. Bulls model a simple scenario: if WBD pays down $3B/year in debt, in 3–4 years net debt falls from $34.6B to ~$22–25B, and if the corporate split re-rates the equity at 8–9x EBITDA (vs. current ~6x), the stock could be worth $20–30 — a 2–3x from current levels. This asymmetry — significant downside protection from FCF, significant upside from de-leveraging + re-rating — is the core bull thesis for value investors.

Bear Case Risks

  1. $34.6B Net Debt is Existential in a Stress Scenario — WBD's debt load (73% of market cap) is the dominant bear case risk. At $34.6B net debt vs. ~$9.5B EBITDA, leverage is 3.6x — manageable in normal conditions but dangerous in a downturn. If advertising revenues decline sharply (recession), streaming subscriber growth stalls, or a major studio release fails commercially (a $300M+ film write-off is possible), the interest cost ($2B+/year) could crowd out FCF needed for debt repayment. Any credit rating downgrade would increase borrowing costs, creating a vicious cycle. Bears note that WBD's bonds trade at distressed-adjacent yields, reflecting lenders' concerns about long-term solvency in a prolonged media environment decline.

  2. NBA Rights Loss + Linear Network Decline Accelerating — TNT lost the NBA broadcast rights after the 2024–25 season, losing a tentpole sports property that drove affiliate fees and advertising for decades. This accelerates TNT's relative decline and weakens its carriage negotiation leverage with distributors. Combined with the structural cord-cutting trend (linear TV subscribers declining ~6–7%/year), WBD's Networks segment EBITDA is projected to decline ~11% by 2026 and continue shrinking. The Discovery/HGTV/TLC portfolio, while cash-generative, faces similar headwinds. The planned spin of "Discovery Global" effectively acknowledges these assets are in terminal decline — the question is whether the cash they generate before the decline ends justifies the market value.

  3. Streaming Competition is Intensifying as Max Needs More Content Investment — Max competes with Netflix ($17B+ content budget), Disney+/Hulu ($10B+ combined), and Apple TV+ (rumored $8B+). HBO's prestige content is WBD's moat, but the prestige TV genre is now crowded — every major streamer is chasing the same showrunners, talent, and IP. WBD's content budget is constrained by its debt load; it cannot match Netflix's production scale. If WBD cannot maintain HBO's quality reputation and subscriber pricing power in an era of "streaming fatigue" and subscription rationalization, churn could increase. Any evidence of subscriber saturation at 130–150M — without a clear path to 200M+ — would challenge the streaming growth narrative that underpins the bull case.

Upcoming Events

  • Mid-2026: Corporate split into "Streaming & Studios" and "Discovery Global" — primary value unlock catalyst
  • 2026: Max international expansion (Germany, Italy, UK, Ireland) — subscriber growth catalyst
  • FY2026: 150M subscriber target — key proof point for streaming growth thesis
  • Ongoing: Quarterly FCF and debt balance — deleveraging progress is the most watched metric
  • 2026: Major HBO content slate (White Lotus S3, House of Dragon S3) — subscriber acquisition/retention catalyst

Analyst Sentiment

Cautiously mixed: 6 Buy / 13 Hold / 1 Sell, with median price target ~$29.75 (implying massive ~+230% upside from ~$9/share). The wide dispersion reflects genuine uncertainty — some analysts see a deeply undervalued asset with the split as the catalyst; others are skeptical of the debt load and linear decline speed. WBD is a high-conviction, high-risk debate: the company either re-rates dramatically post-split as streaming value is unlocked, or the debt prevents the equity from ever fully participating in the underlying asset quality.

Research Date

Generated: 2026-05-13

Full Research Available

This primer covers steps 1–3 of 21. The full deep dive includes moat analysis, DCF valuation, bull/bear scenarios, management quality, earnings transcript analysis, competitive positioning, returns on capital, institutional/insider activity, and an investment memo.

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