Business
WBD employees fear job losses with Paramount merger
An American flag flies at Warner Bros. Studio in Burbank, California, on Sept. 12, 2025.
Mario Tama | Getty Images
The Warner Bros. Discovery board may have enriched its shareholders Thursday when it chose Paramount Skydance‘s acquisition offer over Netflix‘s, but it also terrified a lot of its employees.
While some of those people own WBD shares and may prefer the financials of Paramount’s $31-per-share bid to Netflix’s $27.75-per-share offer, CNBC spoke to 10 WBD employees in a variety of different roles at the company. All 10, who asked not to be named for fear of potential backlash, expressed concerns about potential job losses and questions of who would ultimately run their divisions if Paramount and WBD are eventually merged.
“It’s fair to say people are deflated by the news,” said one long-term WBD executive.
Nonetheless, a WBD-Paramount merger “is not a done deal,” as California Attorney General Rob Bonta said yesterday.
The transaction must gain regulatory approval both in the U.S. and in Europe. WBD CEO David Zaslav acknowledged at an all-hands meeting Friday that the deal may still be blocked and expressed sympathy for those experiencing a sense of whiplash going from Netflix to Paramount, according to people familiar with the matter.
“The deal may not close. If it doesn’t close, we get $7 billion, and we get back to work,” Zaslav said, according to leaked audio provided to Business Insider.

Still, several WBD employees told CNBC they wished Netflix had acquired WBD, citing several factors.
While Paramount and WBD both have core competencies in news, sports, theatrical film and streaming TV, Netflix has far less overlap. Netflix co-CEO Ted Sarandos repeatedly said he planned to leave the WBD business alone, keeping its theatrical business separate from Netflix while also keeping HBO Max as a separate, independent streaming service for the foreseeable future.
Netflix also wasn’t acquiring WBD’s linear cable business with its bid. Employees at CNN, TNT Sports and the old Discovery networks would have remained in their jobs to forge a path as a standalone publicly traded company.
Now, WBD employees are staring at potentially massive job cuts. Paramount executives have previously stated they plan to cut $6 billion by eliminating “duplicative operations” on “back office, finance, corporate, legal, technology, infrastructure, et cetera,” according to Chief Strategy Officer Andy Gordon. Both WBD and Paramount have already gone through thousands of job cuts in recent years.
There are also questions about culture and leadership. While Mark Thompson currently runs CNN, Bari Weiss is the editor-in-chief at CBS News and could plausibly have CNN added to her purview.
The Wall Street Journal reported in December that Paramount CEO David Ellison promised President Donald Trump he’d make sweeping changes at CNN if he gained control of the network. Three CNN employees who spoke with CNBC said there’s rampant fear among their colleagues about Weiss making dramatic changes to the cable network’s anchors and tone.
“Despite all the speculation you’ve read during this process, I’d suggest that you don’t jump to conclusions about the future until we know more,” Thompson wrote in a memo to employees Thursday.
CNN media reporter Brian Stelter noted CNN “is a highly profitable business, and it would be foolish for any owner to put that at risk.”
On the entertainment side, WBD employees fear there may be too many proverbial cooks in the kitchen, which could bog down creativity and innovation for both film and TV.
One WBD executive noted that Paramount’s President Jeff Shell, Chair of Direct to Consumer Cindy Holland and Chair of TV George Cheeks are all used to being senior leaders in their organizations. Shell was CEO of NBCUniversal. Cheeks was co-CEO of Paramount before it merged with Skydance. Holland was a top executive at Netflix, where she worked for 18 years.
How that mix meshes with WBD’s entertainment leadership group is an open question and could lead to culture clashes.
TNT Sports is run by Luis Silberwasser and has largely steered WBD toward younger audiences with its programming decisions and investments, including Bleacher Report and House of Highlights. CBS Sports, meanwhile, is driven by the demographics of those who watch CBS and has historically catered to an older audience. This could lead to culture clash, or the divisions could mesh nicely as complementary assets.
While Silberwasser will have to work with CBS Sports President David Berson on employee duplications, like every other department, there’s some reason for optimism in the sports division, because WBD and CBS have worked together for many years producing March Madness, the NCAA men’s basketball tournament. That’s given the units some degree of familiarity with each other.
WBD also lost NBA rights last season. Combining with CBS’ robust portfolio of sports rights, including the NFL and the Masters, makes WBD a major player again in sports, even if it’s as a subsidiary of CBS.
One other repeated concern among employees is the $64 billion in debt coming as part of the $111 billion enterprise value for the deal. Several employees said servicing large debt loads has hindered WBD in recent years, and they feared this could lead to more of the same. Two employees noted there’s comfort being a part of a giant company like Netflix, with a market capitalization of more than $400 billion. Paramount Skydance’s market valuation is just $15 billion.
Business
Wall Street Week Ahead: AI disruption hangs over US markets as investors wary of risks
The disruptive potential of AI has consumed investors in recent weeks, with shares in industries such as software, wealth management and real estate services pummeled by concerns about business upheaval.
“There continues to be this…back and forth about who might be the victim and those that will actually emerge winners because they are harnessing AI as opposed to being replaced by it,” said Kristina Hooper, chief market strategist at Man Group.
“There is very little definitive right now about that, and so I think that will continue to be a concern.”
Stock prices in areas such as software remain acutely sensitive to AI-related developments. AI bellwether Nvidia’s highly anticipated quarterly report failed to calm nerves, with the semiconductor giant’s shares falling over 5% on Thursday and weighing on the technology sector. Investors are concerned about whether Nvidia’s “hyperscaler” customers will garner sufficient returns to justify their massive spending on data centers and other infrastructure.
Despite the tech sector’s struggles, gains this year in other areas such as industrials and consumer staples have helped buoy major equity indexes. The benchmark S&P 500 was up 0.9% in 2026 as of Thursday.
“The U.S. equity market is sort of in its late cycle, trying to find the winners and losers of this new disruptive technology and pretty much treading water,” said John Velis, Americas macro strategist at BNY.
WILL FEBRUARY JOBS BACK JANUARY’S STRENGTH?
The U.S. jobs report for February, due on March 6, is expected to show an increase of 60,000 jobs, according to a Reuters poll. It comes after January’s surprisingly robust report, with an increase of 130,000 jobs and the unemployment rate falling to 4.3%.
The January report allayed worries about a weakening labor market, but “the concern is that January is a one-off,” said Paul Nolte, senior wealth adviser and market strategist at Murphy & Sylvest Wealth Management.
“We saw a good January jobs report, but we also have seen a really weak 2025 for the job market,” Hooper said. “And so the question becomes, where do we go from here?”
Investors will also seek clues from the report about when the Federal Reserve may next cut interest rates. Fed funds futures suggest the next reduction will come in June or July, after Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s term ends in May and his nominated replacement Kevin Warsh could be in charge.
The Fed cut rates last year in the face of a weakening employment backdrop but paused the easing cycle in January, and solid jobs data could prompt investors to push back their expectations for further cuts. Investors generally associate lower interest rates with higher prices for stocks and other assets.
BNY’s Velis said the market’s reaction to the jobs data will be telling for which factors are prominent for equity investors. For example, strong data followed by weak stock performance is “going to be a sign that the rate argument is important,” Velis said.
RETAIL SALES, BROADCOM EARNINGS ALSO UP NEXT
Other economic releases due in the coming week include reports on manufacturing and services sector activity. The retail sales report for January is expected on March 6.
Aside from Broadcom’s quarterly report on Wednesday, results are expected from retailers Best Buy and Target.
Wall Street is eager for any evidence of AI’s impact on the economy, both positive and negative. In an interview with Reuters this week, outgoing Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic said the U.S. may be entering a period of structurally higher unemployment as firms deploy AI tools to save labor. “Major technological shifts provoke both excitement and anxiety,” Keith Lerner, chief investment officer at Truist Advisory Services, said in a research note on Thursday. “More recently… optimism has begun to give way to heightened anxiety and increasingly bleak narratives about AI’s impact on work, productivity, and economic outcomes.”
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What Is a Blue Alert? TBI Activates Statewide Search for Danell Maxwell After Memphis Officer Shot
The Tennessee Bureau of Investigation activated a statewide Blue Alert shortly before midnight Thursday for 40-year-old Danell Maxwell, wanted in connection with the shooting of a Memphis police officer in the Parkway Village neighborhood.

Authorities say the officer was shot around 8:15 p.m. Thursday near South Perkins Road and Cottonwood Road. The officer, whose identity and gender have not been released, was transported to Regional One Medical Center in serious but stable condition and is fighting for their life, according to sources familiar with the incident.
The Blue Alert, issued around midnight, identifies Maxwell as the suspect in the attempted first-degree murder of the officer. He is described as 5 feet 10 inches tall, weighing about 180 pounds, last seen wearing dark-colored clothing and an orange and green reflective vest. He is believed to be armed with a silver handgun and should be considered armed and dangerous.
Anyone with information on Maxwell’s whereabouts is urged to contact the Memphis Police Department at 901-528-2274 or the TBI at 1-800-TBI-FIND. Tips can also be submitted anonymously.
A Blue Alert is a public safety notification system designed to aid in the rapid apprehension of violent offenders who have killed or seriously injured a law enforcement officer in the line of duty. Modeled after the AMBER Alert for missing children, Blue Alerts disseminate critical information through television, radio, wireless emergency alerts on cellphones, highway message signs and other channels.
The system, supported by the National Blue Alert Network under the U.S. Department of Justice, activates when criteria are met: an officer has been killed or seriously wounded, the suspect poses an imminent threat to public safety or other officers, and sufficient descriptive information is available to assist in locating the individual. Alerts can also issue for missing officers or those facing credible threats.
Tennessee participates in the national framework, allowing statewide coordination between agencies like the TBI and local departments such as Memphis Police. The alert helps mobilize community assistance while warning the public of potential danger.
The shooting occurred in Parkway Village, a residential area in southeast Memphis. A heavy law enforcement presence remained at Regional One Hospital into the early morning hours Friday as officers stood vigil while the wounded officer received treatment.
Memphis City Councilman JB Smiley Jr. confirmed the incident late Thursday, expressing concern for the officer’s condition and calling for community support in locating the suspect.
No additional details on the circumstances leading to the shooting have been released, including whether it stemmed from a traffic stop, domestic call or other encounter. The TBI is leading the investigation at the request of local authorities, standard protocol in Tennessee for officer-involved incidents or crimes against officers.
The incident marks another challenge for Memphis law enforcement, which has faced high violent crime rates and officer safety concerns in recent years. Community leaders and police unions have repeatedly highlighted the risks officers face daily.
As of Friday afternoon, the Blue Alert remained active with no reports of Maxwell’s apprehension. Law enforcement urged residents to remain vigilant, avoid approaching the suspect if sighted and report any sightings immediately.
Public response to the alert included widespread sharing on social media, with many expressing prayers for the officer’s recovery and frustration over violence against first responders. Some residents in nearby areas like Cordova and midtown speculated on possible locations, though officials stressed relying on verified information.
The case underscores the purpose of Blue Alerts: to bridge the gap between law enforcement and the public in high-stakes manhunts. Since its inception, the system has helped apprehend numerous suspects nationwide by leveraging widespread notifications.
For now, authorities continue an intensive search across Tennessee and potentially bordering states, given Memphis’s location near Arkansas and Mississippi. The TBI and Memphis PD are coordinating efforts, with possible assistance from federal partners if the suspect crosses jurisdictions.
The wounded officer’s condition was described as stable but critical, with updates expected as medical teams provide care. The Memphis Police Department has not named the officer pending family notification and in line with department policy.
This developing story highlights ongoing concerns about officer safety amid rising tensions in urban areas. As the investigation proceeds, more details may emerge about the encounter and Maxwell’s background.
Residents are encouraged to stay informed through official channels and assist by providing any credible tips without endangering themselves.
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CLSE: Impressive Performance Amid Capital Rotation Reinforces Buy Rating (BATS:CLSE)
Vasily Zyryanov is an individual investor and writer.He uses various techniques to find both relatively underpriced equities with strong upside potential and relatively overappreciated companies that have inflated valuation for a reason.In his research, he pays much attention to the energy sector (oil & gas supermajors, mid-cap, and small-cap exploration & production companies, the oilfield services firms), while he also covers a plethora of other industries from mining and chemicals to luxury bellwethers.He firmly believes that apart from simple profit and sales analysis, a meticulous investor must assess Free Cash Flow and Return on Capital to gain deeper insights and avoid sophomoric conclusions.While he favors underappreciated and misunderstood equities, he also acknowledges that some growth stocks do deserve their premium valuation, and its an investor’s primary goal to delve deeper and uncover if the market’s current opinion is correct or not.
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Business
IonQ Shares Surge 22% on Explosive Q4 Revenue Beat, Bullish 2026 Guidance
IonQ, Inc. (NYSE: IONQ), a leading quantum computing company, saw its shares rocket more than 21% Thursday after reporting fourth-quarter results that far exceeded expectations and issuing optimistic revenue guidance for 2026 that topped Wall Street forecasts.

The stock closed regular trading at $40.88, up $7.29 or 21.70% from the previous close of $33.59, on massive volume exceeding 69 million shares — well above its average. Intraday trading ranged from a low of $38.75 to a high of $41.90, reflecting strong investor enthusiasm following the earnings release.
IonQ reported fourth-quarter revenue of $61.9 million, a staggering 429% increase from $11.7 million in the prior-year period. The figure beat the company’s own guidance midpoint by 55% and surpassed analyst expectations. For full-year 2025, revenue reached $130 million, up 202% year-over-year and 20% above the guidance midpoint, marking the first time a publicly traded quantum computing firm surpassed $100 million in annual GAAP revenue.
Adjusted loss per share narrowed to $0.20, better than the consensus estimate of a $0.23 loss. The results highlighted accelerating commercial demand, with more than 60% of 2025 revenue from commercial customers and over 30% from international sales. Organic growth approached 80% year-over-year.
CEO Niccolo de Masi described the performance as evidence of IonQ’s evolution into the “world’s only full-stack quantum platform company.” He emphasized strong backlog, pipeline visibility and momentum positioning the firm for continued expansion.
For 2026, IonQ guided full-year revenue between $225 million and $245 million, with a midpoint of $235 million — about 22% above the average analyst estimate of roughly $193 million. First-quarter revenue is projected at $48 million to $51 million. The outlook implies roughly 81% year-over-year growth at the midpoint, driven by sustained demand for trapped-ion quantum systems, software and services.
The company anticipates an adjusted EBITDA loss of $310 million to $330 million for 2026, reflecting heavy investments in scaling operations, R&D and recent acquisitions. IonQ maintains a robust cash position of approximately $3.3 billion, providing runway for these initiatives.
A key catalyst in the report was IonQ’s announcement of deploying one of Europe’s largest operational quantum key distribution networks in Romania as part of the RoNaQCI project. The deployment underscores growing adoption in quantum networking and security applications across government and enterprise sectors.
IonQ also highlighted progress toward major milestones, including shipments of its Tempo system in 2026 and a planned 256-qubit demonstration. The company is pursuing a $1.8 billion acquisition of SkyWater Technology, a quantum chip foundry, to bolster manufacturing capabilities and reduce costs for future high-qubit systems.
Analysts reacted positively overall, though some adjusted targets modestly. Jefferies maintained a Buy rating but trimmed its price target, while JP Morgan lowered its target from $47 to $42 while keeping a Neutral stance. The average one-year price target from 12 analysts stands around $71, implying significant upside from current levels, with highs reaching $100.
Technical indicators show IonQ breaking key resistance near $40, with the surge pushing it well above recent trading ranges but still below its 52-week high of $84.64 from October 2025. The 52-week low sits at $17.88. The stock’s beta of around 2.6 indicates high volatility, typical for emerging tech in quantum computing.
Market observers note IonQ’s results as a potential inflection point for the quantum sector, demonstrating commercial traction amid competition from rivals like Rigetti, Quantinuum and IBM. The company’s trapped-ion approach has achieved notable performance benchmarks, including a world-record 99.99% two-qubit gate fidelity in 2025.
Despite the rally, IonQ remains unprofitable on an adjusted basis, with full-year 2025 net losses at $510.4 million and adjusted EBITDA loss of $186.8 million. Investors are betting on the long-term transformative potential of quantum computing in fields like drug discovery, materials science, financial modeling, logistics, cybersecurity and defense.
The stock’s performance contrasts with broader market trends Thursday, where some tech names faced pressure. IonQ’s surge stood out as a bright spot in speculative growth sectors.
As quantum adoption accelerates, IonQ’s focus on full-stack solutions, international expansion and strategic partnerships positions it as a frontrunner. Traders will monitor execution on 2026 milestones, backlog conversion and any updates on the SkyWater deal for further catalysts.
For now, the earnings beat and raised outlook have reignited enthusiasm, sending shares to their strongest close in recent months and signaling renewed confidence in quantum computing’s commercial path.
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