US regulator approves $10.7 billion Paramount-Skydance merger
Approval came after the Trump administration extracted concessions on political coverage and diversity practices.
LOS ANGELES – The US$8.4 billion (S$10.7 billion) merger between Paramount Global and Skydance Media won approval from the US regulator on July 24, clearing the way for a sale that evolved into a clash over press freedom in the era of President Donald Trump.
The deal will put well-known entertainment properties including the CBS broadcast television network, Paramount Pictures, and the Nickelodeon cable channel under the ownership of tech scion David Ellison, son of Oracle co-founder Larry Ellison.
Paramount in July paid US$16 million in a controversial move to settle a lawsuit Mr Trump filed against the company and CBS News, sparking accusations it effectively had paid for approval of the merger.
The Federal Communications Commission approved the deal in a partisan 2-1 vote that allows the transfer of CBS television stations. FCC chairman Brendan Carr, an appointee of Republican Trump, said the agency had received assurances from the incoming owners that they were committed to unbiased journalism.
Democrat Anna Gomez, the FCC's sole dissenter, accused Paramount of 'cowardly capitulation' to the Trump administration. She also said the FCC was imposing 'never-before-seen controls over newsroom decisions.'
CBS News was one of several news organisations Trump attacked for what he viewed as unfavourable coverage. Paramount paid Mr Trump to end a lawsuit he filed over CBS' editing of a '60 Minutes' interview with his Democratic opponent, Kamala Harris.
Mr Trump, who often accuses media outlets of liberal bias and 'fake news,' argued that the editing was designed to make Ms Harris look good. First Amendment lawyers said the suit was without merit.
Top stories
Swipe. Select. Stay informed.
Business GIC posts 3.8% annualised return over 20 years despite economic uncertainties
Business GIC's focus on long-term value aims to avoid permanent loss amid intensifying economic changes
Opinion No idle punt: Why Singapore called out cyber saboteur UNC3886 by name
Asia Cambodia and Thailand are willing to consider ceasefire: Malaysian PM Anwar
Asia Deadly Thai-Cambodian dispute puts Asean's relevance on the line
Business MAS' measures spark cautious optimism for Singapore stock market revival: Analysts
World Trump and Fed chief Powell bicker during tense central bank visit
Life Hulk Hogan, who helped turn pro wrestling into a billion-dollar spectacle, dies at 71
Mr Carr has said the agency's review of the proposed merger was not connected to the lawsuit.
Senators Edward Markey of Massachusetts and Ben Ray Luján of New Mexico said the merger 'reeks of the worst form of corruption,' coming on the heels of Paramount's settlement.
The commission received pledges from Skydance that it would appoint an ombudsman to evaluate complaints of editorial bias or other concerns about CBS. Skydance also told the FCC it would not establish any diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives, which Mr Trump believes are discriminatory.
'These commitments, if implemented, would enable CBS to operate in the public interest,' Mr Carr said, who also hailed 'another step forward in the FCC's efforts to eliminate invidious forms of DEI discrimination.'
'The Late Show' host Stephen Colbert had called Paramount's settlement 'a big fat bribe.' His show was cancelled days later in what Paramount called a financial decision unrelated to politics.
It marks the end of an era for the family of the late Sumner Redstone, who transformed the family's chain of drive-in movie theatres into a media empire that once spanned broadcast and cable television, film, radio and publishing. His daughter Shari Redstone became chair of Paramount in 2019.
At the time, she hoped to better position the company to compete with the world's entertainment giants. Paramount has since shed billions of dollars in market valuation as it struggled to navigate an entertainment business upended by the streaming video revolution.
The FCC approved the transaction after a review of more than 250 days, longer than the commission's target of completing such reviews within 180 days.
Skydance chief executive officer Mr Ellison is poised to become chair and chief executive of the new Paramount. Jeff Shell, former chief executive of Comcast's NBCUniversal, will be its new president.
Chris McCarthy, one of Paramount's current trio of CEOs has decided to depart the company once the merger is completed, a source with knowledge of the matter said. REUTERS
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Business Times
24 minutes ago
- Business Times
How reliable is the 60/40 portfolio in downturns? Adding private debt not a panacea
[SINGAPORE] A big argument in favour of an investment in private markets is that the traditional 60/40 balanced portfolio (60 per cent stocks, 40 per cent bonds) is no longer as reliable or robust as it traditionally was. The steep portfolio loss in 2022 when stocks and bonds fell at the same time – and each asset class by double digits – has likely scarred most investors. It is no coincidence that since that year, strategists and bankers have redoubled efforts to persuade investors to invest in assets that are less correlated with public markets. Institutions and private wealth advisers alike are pinning their hopes on private markets to drive not just overall portfolio returns but also dampen risk. BlackRock chairman Larry Fink in his 2025 letter wrote that the future standard portfolio may have the allocation of 50/30/20 – that is, 50 per cent stocks, 30 per cent bonds and 20 per cent in private assets such as infrastructure, real estate and private credit. 'Generations of investors have done well following (the 60/40) approach, owning a mix of the entire market rather than individual securities. But as the global financial system continues to evolve, the classic 60/40 portfolio may no longer fully represent true diversification,' he wrote. The big question dogging the 60/40 method is not so much that of the risk and return of equities, but rather of bonds. Have bonds lost their ability to diversify? It is significant that the three types of private assets Fink cites are those that come closest to bonds. Infrastructure, real estate and private credit all generate a yield. Private assets also show lower correlation with public markets. Retail investors are able to access listed infrastructure and real estate investment trusts. Private debt is currently confined to accredited investors. And, in today's environment, there may be reasons for caution in private debt, which I will touch on shortly. BT in your inbox Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox. Sign Up Sign Up Strategists are not calling for the scrapping of the 60/40 portfolio, but to enhance its diversification benefits. Still, some fund managers maintain that the 60/40 approach continues to prove its value even without private markets, and the 2022 experience was an outlier. Morningstar noted that 2022 was the single year over a 150-year period that bonds failed to provide diversification benefit in a downturn. Could it happen again? 60/40 portfolio's track record Erin Browne, Pimco managing director and portfolio manager, said that the 60/40 portfolio has proven its resiliency – not just over the past decade but over more than 30 years. Browne, based in Pimco's Newport Beach office, looks after the firm's multi-asset strategies. Pimco manages more than US$2 trillion in assets. 'Our portfolio is up by around 10 per cent year to date, and the (reference) 60/40 is up by 8 per cent. It really has proven to be a good core ballast of delivering portfolio returns over different market environments and histories. This year is no different,' she said. Pimco's data shows that since 1990, a global 60/40 portfolio has returned just 0.7 per cent less than global stocks on an annualised basis, but with 37 per cent less volatility. 'The US stock-bond correlation has gotten more negative over recent months, with the one-year correlation dropping from 0 to minus 15 per cent. This is particularly valuable in an uncertain macro environment; both stocks and bonds can benefit from a soft landing amid central bank rate cuts,' she added. 'If growth deteriorates faster than expected, high-quality bonds provide a ballast. Finally, the long-term track record and easy-to-understand benefits of a 60/40 allocation allows investors to stay invested rather than attempt to time the market, which typically causes underperformance.' Browne said inflows into Pimco's multi-asset offerings are not just from retirement savers, but also more broadly from investors looking to build a 'strong, stable bellwether' as their core portfolio. 'Flows are really coming from investors looking to create the core of their asset allocation strategy, where they're able to participate in continued upside in equities, and also have some diversification.' She believes volatility is likely to be elevated given the geopolitical and macroeconomic shifts, from a 'unique unipolar world' to a multi-polar world, and from global cooperation to fragmentation. 'There will be friction in that change… Growth is also slowing on a global basis, and that creates pockets for disruption within global markets and equities, which creates more volatility.' Morningstar research found that the poor performance of the 60/40 portfolio in 2022 was due to a painful bear market in bonds that actually began around 2020. In its analysis of how the 60/40 portfolio performed over 150 years, it found that the crash of the 2020s was the only one where the decline of the 60/40 portfolio was more painful than that of an all-stock portfolio. That is, while the deepest drawdown of the 60/40 portfolio was shallower than the all-equity portfolio, it has taken the 60/40 portfolio longer to recover. In the 2020s, the downturn in equities – brought on by the Ukraine war, higher inflation and supply shortages – coincided with a bear market in bonds. 'While the stock market recovered to its previous high in September 2024, the bond market has not yet fully emerged from underwater. This decline was so severe that it prevented the 60/40 portfolio from returning to its previous high until June 2025 – marking the only time in the past 150 years that the 60/40 portfolio experienced more pain than the stock market,' it said. 'Nonetheless, even in this once-in-150-years bond bear market, the depth of the decline experienced by a 60/40 portfolio was less than that of either the stock market or the bond market alone.' Pimco's Browne argued that the starting point of bond yields is key for an investor. 'I don't think fixed income as a risk diversifier is dead. There's real potential for fixed income to continue to deliver not only on income return but also diversification,' she noted. 'In 2020 inflation ran very high, and the starting points of yields were exceptionally low in a negative or zero-rate environment. But where we are today is quite different. The starting point of yields today provides a really nice cushion to protect portfolios in risk-off events, with 10-year yields exceeding 4 per cent. Yields tend to be very highly correlated with the expected return of the asset over the next five years.' Caution on private credit What about private credit as a bond proxy? Despite an attractive yield, it is not a panacea for returns or lower risk. There is also reason for caution when almost every private banker or sales person trots out private debt offerings. According to an article in the Financial Times, the GIC itself is cautious as the asset class is untested in a major credit default cycle. GIC chief investment officer Bryan Yeo reportedly said the investment company is 'raising the bar in terms of further deployment in the private credit space', adding: 'We're now at a part of the cycle where we feel that spreads are a lot tighter, and valuations are also higher.' Pimco is wary as well. It noted in its mid-year report that credit spreads remained tight relative to historic averages despite signs of 'elevated secular recession potential', which reflects some complacency in public and private credit markets. Private credit, it said, is vulnerable to broad risk asset repricing due to its 'large allocations' into technology and artificial intelligence disruptors. 'Amid limited fiscal space, a genuine credit default cycle – unlike the recent 'buy the dip' era – may unfold for the first time in years, catching many investors unprepared… We express caution in areas of private corporate credit where capital formation has outpaced investable opportunities, leading to potential disappointment.'

Straits Times
24 minutes ago
- Straits Times
While You Were Sleeping: 5 stories you might have missed, July 28, 2025
Find out what's new on ST website and app. US President Donald Trump meets with European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, in Turnberry, Scotland, Britain, on July 27. US and EU clinch deal with broad 15% tariffs on EU goods to avert trade war The United States struck a framework trade deal with the European Union on Sunday, imposing a 15 per cent US import tariff on most EU goods, but averting a spiralling battle between two allies which account for almost a third of global trade. The announcement came after European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen travelled for talks with US President Donald Trump at his golf course in western Scotland to push a hard-fought deal over the line. 'I think this is the biggest deal ever made,' Trump told reporters after an hour-long meeting with von der Leyen, who said the 15 per cent tariff applied 'across the board'. READ MORE HERE WHO says malnutrition reaching 'alarming levels' in Gaza NYT Malnutrition rates are reaching 'alarming levels' in the Gaza Strip, the World Health Organization warned Sunday, saying the 'deliberate blocking' of aid was entirely preventable and had cost many lives. 'Malnutrition is on a dangerous trajectory in the Gaza Strip, marked by a spike in deaths in July,' the WHO said in a statement. Of the 74 recorded malnutrition-related deaths in 2025, 63 had occurred in July – including 24 children under five, one child aged over five, and 38 adults, it added. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Singapore Sewage shaft failure linked to sinkhole; PUB calling safety time-out on similar works islandwide Singapore Tanjong Katong Road sinkhole did not happen overnight: Experts Singapore Workers used nylon rope to rescue driver of car that fell into Tanjong Katong Road sinkhole Asia Singapore-only car washes will get business licences revoked, says Johor govt World Food airdropped into Gaza as Israel opens aid routes Sport Arsenal beat Newcastle in five-goal thriller to bring Singapore Festival of Football to a close Singapore Benchmark barrier: Six of her homeschooled kids had to retake the PSLE Asia S'porean trainee doctor in Melbourne arrested for allegedly filming colleagues in toilets since 2021 READ MORE HERE Several killed in train crash in Germany, media say AFP At least three people were injured when a regional train carrying about 100 passengers derailed in southwestern Germany on Sunday, police said. German media reported that several people had been killed. 'The accident occurred at around 6:10 pm (1710 GMT) near the town of Riedlingen in Baden-Wuerttemberg state,' a police spokesperson told AFP. READ MORE HERE Wildfire in Sardinia forces dozens to flee beach by boat via REUTERS Dozens of beachgoers in Sardinia were forced to flee by boat on July 27 when a huge wildfire broke out nearby, blocking other escape routes, firefighters on the Italian island said. Black smoke could be seen rising from the beach in Villasimius in the south of the island. Strong winds were hindering rescue efforts, firefighters said in a statement, adding that several cars had been burned. READ MORE HERE Peerless Pogacar claims fourth Tour title, Van Aert wins brutal final stage REUTERS Tadej Pogacar claimed his fourth Tour de France title on July 27, cementing his status as the most dominant rider of his generation and moving alongside Britain's Chris Froome on the all-time winners' list. The 26-year-old Slovenian, who triumphed in 2020, 2021 and 2024, delivered a near-flawless performance, even coming close to prevailing on a spectacular final stage on the Champs Elysees after an epic duel with Belgian Wout van Aert. 'Just speechless to win a fourth Tour de France. Six years in a row on the podium and this one feels especially amazing, and I'm super proud that I can wear this yellow jersey,' Pogacar, who was second in 2022 and 2023, said.

Straits Times
an hour ago
- Straits Times
US and EU clinch deal with broad 15% tariffs on EU goods to avert trade war
TURNBERRY, Scotland - The United States struck a framework trade deal with the European Union on Sunday, imposing a 15 per cent US import tariff on most EU goods, but averting a spiralling battle between two allies which account for almost a third of global trade. The announcement came after European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen travelled for talks with US President Donald Trump at his golf course in western Scotland to push a hard-fought deal over the line. 'I think this is the biggest deal ever made,' Trump told reporters after an hour-long meeting with von der Leyen, who said the 15 per cent tariff applied 'across the board'. 'We have a trade deal between the two largest economies in the world, and it's a big deal. It's a huge deal. It will bring stability. It will bring predictability,' she said. The deal, that also includes US$600 billion (S$768 billion) of EU investments in the United States and significant EU purchases of US energy and military equipment, will indeed bring clarity for EU companies. However, the baseline tariff of 15 per cent will be seen by many in Europe as a poor outcome compared to the initial European ambition of a zero-for-zero tariff deal, although it is better than the threatened 30 per cent rate. The deal mirrors parts of the framework agreement the United States clinched with Japan last week. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Singapore Sewage shaft failure linked to sinkhole; PUB calling safety time-out on similar works islandwide Singapore Tanjong Katong Road sinkhole did not happen overnight: Experts Singapore Workers used nylon rope to rescue driver of car that fell into Tanjong Katong Road sinkhole Asia Singapore-only car washes will get business licences revoked, says Johor govt World Food airdropped into Gaza as Israel opens aid routes Sport Arsenal beat Newcastle in five-goal thriller to bring Singapore Festival of Football to a close Singapore Benchmark barrier: Six of her homeschooled kids had to retake the PSLE Asia S'porean trainee doctor in Melbourne arrested for allegedly filming colleagues in toilets since 2021 'We are agreeing that the tariff... for automobiles and everything else will be a straight across tariff of 15 per cent,' Trump said. However, the 15 per cent baseline rate would not apply to steel and aluminium, for which a 50 per cent tariff would remain in place. Trump, who is seeking to reorder the global economy and reduce decades-old US trade deficits, has so far reeled in agreements with Britain, Japan, Indonesia and Vietnam, although his administration has failed to deliver on a promise of '90 deals in 90 days.' He has periodically railed against the European Union saying it was 'formed to screw the United States' on trade. Arriving in Scotland, Trump said that the EU wanted 'to make a deal very badly' and said, as he met von der Leyen, that Europe had been 'very unfair to the United States'. His main bugbear is the US merchandise trade deficit with the EU, which in 2024 reached $235 billion, according to US Census Bureau data. The EU points to the US surplus in services, which it says partially redresses the balance. Trump also talked on Sunday about the 'hundreds of billions of dollars' that tariffs were bringing in. On July 12, Trump threatened to apply a 30 per cent tariff on imports from the EU starting on August 1, after weeks of negotiations with the major US trading partners failed to reach a comprehensive trade deal. The EU had prepared countertariffs on 93 billion euros (S$139 billion) of US goods in the event there was no deal and Trump had pressed ahead with 30 per cent tariffs. Some member states had also pushed for the bloc to use its most powerful trade weapon, the anti-coercion instrument, to target US services in the event of a no-deal. REUTERS