Fox Corp (FOXA.O) surged into streaming’s distribution tier Monday, agreeing to acquire Roku (ROKU.O) for roughly $22 billion in a cash-and-stock deal that sent Fox shares down nearly 17% on dilution fears while Roku traded as much as 12% below the offer price.
The transaction is Fox’s largest M&A move since CEO Lachlan Murdoch consolidated control of the Murdoch media empire, and it reframes the broadcaster – historically reliant on pay-TV carriage fees – as a data-rich digital advertising platform with direct billing relationships across more than 20 million households 1.
Key Takeaways
- Roku shareholders receive $96 cash plus ~0.97 Fox Class A shares per share
- Combined entity would rank third in U.S. TV viewing behind YouTube and Disney
- Deal targets $400 million in annual cost savings; close expected H1 2027
Market Reaction & Context
Roku shares surged roughly 20% on the news but remained below the implied offer price of $160 per share – a 33.7% premium to Roku’s closing price on Thursday, the day before deal speculation surfaced 1. Fox Class A shares fell nearly 17%, a steeper single-day decline than the stock recorded during its 2020 Tubi acquisition, reflecting investor concern over the $8.3 billion in incremental debt the deal adds to Fox’s balance sheet 2.
By Nielsen audience-share metrics, the merged company would leapfrog Netflix to become the third-largest player in U.S. TV viewing, trailing only YouTube and Walt Disney Co. – a competitive repositioning that J.P. Morgan analyst Cory Carpenter said would “fundamentally pivot the business toward digital and answer long-term concerns about a legacy in PayTV.” 1
Deal Structure & Strategic Rationale
Under the agreement, Roku investors receive $96 in cash and approximately 0.97 Fox Class A shares for each share held, valuing the offer at $160 per share 1. The cash portion totals roughly $14.6 billion, with the remainder settled in stock; Fox shareholders will own about 73% of the combined company at closing 1.
The strategic logic centres on Roku’s reach: the platform touches more than 100 million U.S. households and carries ad-targeting data that Fox’s sports and news franchises – including NFL, MLB and the ongoing FIFA World Cup – could monetise at significantly higher CPMs than traditional linear inventory 1. Roku’s existing billing relationships with more than 20 million customers also give Fox a direct consumer financial relationship it currently lacks 1.
Partnership Tensions & Analyst Scepticism
The merger unites a content producer with a neutral distribution platform that carries apps from Fox rivals including Paramount, NBCUniversal and Netflix, creating potential channel conflicts with pay-TV distributors such as Comcast and YouTube TV that currently license Fox content 1. TD Cowen analyst Doug Creutz was direct in his assessment: “We tend to be skeptical that this deal will generate value for Fox shareholders. The history of content/platform mergers in media has generally not been kind.” 1
Lachlan Murdoch pushed back on conflict concerns, noting that Fox already co-exists with distributors who are also content providers. “We’re partners right now with YouTube, YouTube TV and Comcast, and that doesn’t change,” he said on a call with investors 1.
Outlook
Roku founder and CEO Anthony Wood, who controls more than 55% of Roku’s voting rights and stands to receive as much as $3 billion from the sale, will join Fox’s board and continue in an operational role 1. Both boards have unanimously approved the transaction, which is expected to generate approximately $400 million in annual cost savings and close in the first half of calendar 2027, subject to regulatory clearance 1.
Roku’s free ad-supported Roku Channel will remain separate from Fox’s own ad-supported streamer Tubi, the companies said, preserving distinct brand identities within the combined portfolio 1. Allen & Company advised Fox; Qatalyst Partners advised Roku 1.
Not investment advice. For informational purposes only.
References
1Vinn, Milana; Chmielewski, Dawn; Varghese, Harshita Mary; Soni, Aditya (June 15, 2026). “Fox strikes $22 billion deal for Roku to fuel streaming push”. Reuters. Retrieved June 15, 2026.
2(June 15, 2026). “Fox strikes a $22B deal to buy Roku, aiming to supercharge its streaming reach”. AP News. Retrieved June 15, 2026.