Fox just agreed to pay about $22 billion for Roku. Its own shareholders answered by knocking 17% off Fox's stock in a single morning.
When a buyer's stock falls that hard on deal day, the market is saying something.
Why Fox Wants Roku
Fox owns TV networks, like Fox News and a free streaming app called Tubi. What it doesn't own is the screen those shows land on, and Roku does.
Buying it is like a network buying the streaming box that already sits in millions of living rooms. Roku makes those players and runs The Roku Channel.
That reach is huge. Roku hits more than 100 million streaming homes worldwide and logs 145 billion hours of viewing a year.
Fox CEO Lachlan Murdoch called the deal a "defining moment" for the company. He pointed out that Fox was an early investor in Roku and a longtime partner.
This is Fox's biggest swing in years. About seven years ago, it sold its entertainment business to Disney for $71 billion.
Since then, Fox has leaned mostly on news and live sports. It even bought the free app Tubi back in 2020 for $440 million.
The plan is to keep Tubi and The Roku Channel as separate apps after the deal closes. Fox says the two only share about a third of their viewers.
We break down the deals Wall Street is actually watching in Market Briefs, five minutes a day, plus a free investing masterclass when you sign up.
Why The Stock Tanked
Investors usually punish the buyer when they think it's overpaying. Roku's stock had already jumped 20% on Friday once word of a sale got out, so Fox is paying a full price.
Fox is also taking on debt to get it done. It lined up a $12 billion loan to cover the cash part of the deal.
A purchase this big reshapes the combined company's balance sheet from day one. That alone can spook investors.
Fox does expect about $400 million in yearly cost savings once the two combine. Savings like that take time, and the market wanted proof instead of a promise.
What To Watch
When the deal closes, Fox shareholders would own about 73% of the new company and Roku holders the rest. Both boards have already signed off, and Fox is aiming for the first half of 2027.
Fox is betting it can buy its way into streaming, and its stock fell 17% before lunch.
Want the same plain-English take on every big deal? Sign up for Market Briefs here and get a free 45-minute investing course thrown in.
