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Judge Pauses Ruling on Paramount's $111B Warner Bros. Acquisition

Published Jul 17, 2026
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Summary:
  • A federal judge has until July 22 to decide on a temporary restraining order.
  • A coalition of 12 state attorneys general are suing to block the merger.
  • The Department of Justice closed its antitrust investigation without challenging the deal.

The Legal Hold-Up

A federal judge in California did not make an immediate decision on the state's request to freeze Paramount's $111 billion deal for Warner Bros. Discovery. Judge Araceli Martínez-Olguín set a July 22 deadline to decide on the request for a temporary restraining order.

A temporary restraining order would block the deal from closing while the court weighs the states' lawsuit. Such orders are typically granted when plaintiffs show they would suffer irreparable harm without immediate action. The states argue that the merger's anticompetitive effects constitute such harm.

That means the deal stays in limbo for at least a few more weeks. Paramount wants to move fast to avoid what the company calls "exorbitant ticking fees" - extra costs that pile up while the merger is delayed. These fees typically include interest on bridge loans and other financing costs that accrue daily, making any prolonged regulatory holdup significantly more expensive for Paramount.

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Why the States Are Fighting

California Attorney General Rob Bonta heads a coalition of 12 state attorneys general who have sued to block the deal. The lawsuit contends that merging two major Hollywood studios would harm the industry and concentrate excessive power in the merged entity. The lawsuit claims the megadeal would "lead to higher prices, lower quality, and less content for film and television, harming movie theaters, basic cable distributors, and ultimately, audiences on every sofa and movie theater seat in the U.S."

The U.S. Department of Justice also looked at the deal. Investigators reviewed more than two million documents over eight months. In the end, the DOJ closed its antitrust investigation without challenging the merger, determining that the deal would probably not hurt competition or American consumers. That does not stop the states from trying on their own, because state attorneys general have their own authority under antitrust laws to challenge mergers.

What Paramount Says

Paramount fired back after the complaint was filed. The company said the lawsuit "reflects a fundamentally flawed application of the antitrust laws and is wrong on both the facts and the law."

Paramount argues the merger would actually increase competition by creating a stronger player that can go head‑to‑head with companies like Netflix. A Paramount spokesperson said, "The combination of Paramount and WBD will create a stronger, well‑capitalized, creative‑first media company that is better positioned to compete with companies like Netflix that have come to dominate the industry for audiences, premium content, and creative talent." The spokesperson also said that "delaying this transaction will only harm entertainment workers who have already suffered over recent years as technology has disrupted their livelihood and cost California tens of thousands of entertainment jobs."

Paramount sees this as a battle over who gets to compete in the modern media marketplace, not a case of one company getting too big.

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