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FinanceMonday, June 15, 2026

Fox Acquires Roku in $22bn Streaming Gambit to Reshape US Television

The Murdoch-controlled media group will combine its sports and news assets with Roku’s 100 million households, creating America’s third-largest TV entity by audience share.

Fox Corporation has agreed to acquire the streaming platform Roku in a cash-and-share transaction valued at approximately $22 billion, a deal that marks the most consequential reshaping of the Murdoch media empire since the sale of its film and entertainment assets to Disney seven years ago. Announced on Monday, the acquisition will see Roku shareholders receive $160 per share — a mix of $96 in cash and 0.9693 Fox Class A shares — giving the Murdoch-controlled group roughly 73 per cent of the combined entity. The new company, expected to close in the first half of 2027 pending regulatory clearance, would instantly become the third-largest player in US television by audience share, spanning broadcast, cable, local stations and streaming.

Viewed from Washington, the transaction is a calculated bet that the future of television lies not in owning exclusive content alone but in controlling the interface through which audiences discover it. Lachlan Murdoch, Fox’s chief executive and eldest son of Rupert Murdoch, described the move as a “defining moment” that extends a strategy begun in 2019 when the company reoriented itself around live news and sports, then deepened in 2020 with the purchase of the free, ad-supported streamer Tubi. By adding Roku’s operating system and its own channel — which already commands 3 per cent of all US streaming viewership, according to Nielsen — Fox gains direct access to more than 100 million households globally, along with the first-party data and advertising relationships that have made Roku a formidable player in connected television. Analysts in London note that the deal effectively realises a vision Rupert Murdoch pursued for years: owning the digital “TV guide” that sits between viewers and the proliferating array of streaming services.

Across continental Europe and Latin America, the announcement was read as a signal that the ad-supported streaming model is entering a phase of aggressive consolidation. Italian and Spanish financial dailies highlighted that Roku, unlike subscription-driven rivals such as Netflix or Disney+, derives the vast majority of its revenue from advertising — 91 per cent in the most recent quarter — making it a natural fit for Fox’s portfolio of live sports and news, which remain heavily dependent on linear advertising. Brazilian outlets noted the local-currency equivalent of R$111 billion, underscoring the scale of the wager. Fox has pledged that Roku will continue to operate as an open, partner-friendly platform, but consumer advocates in multiple markets have cautioned that industry consolidation historically leads to higher subscription costs and reduced choice for viewers.

The deal also carries significant regulatory and competitive implications. Russian business press reported that the combined entity will control a substantial share of the US television advertising market, prompting scrutiny from antitrust authorities. Fox expects $400 million in annual cost savings from the merger, and Roku’s founder, Anthony Wood, will join the board of the new company. Yet the transaction arrives at a moment when the boundaries between content creation and distribution are blurring: Paramount’s recent record-breaking move on Warner Bros. Discovery, cited in Argentine coverage, suggests a broader realignment of legacy media assets. For Fox, the acquisition is its first major manoeuvre since Lachlan Murdoch cemented control of the family trust last year, and it positions the company to compete not just with streaming giants but with the tech platforms that increasingly dominate digital advertising.

Looking ahead, the success of the merger will hinge on whether Fox can preserve Roku’s neutrality while leveraging its real estate to promote its own services, including Tubi and the subscription-based Fox One, launched in 2025. If executed deftly, the combination could offer a template for how traditional broadcasters can navigate the transition from cable bundles to a streaming-first world. If mishandled, it risks alienating the very partners — Netflix, YouTube, Amazon — whose apps remain among the most watched on Roku devices today. For now, the wager is clear: in a fragmenting media landscape, the most valuable asset may not be the show itself, but the screen on which it is watched.

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 3 languages

50%
ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Stampa atlantica / anglosferaStampa europea continentale
Stampa atlantica / anglosfera/ economica
trionfopragmatismo

Fox's $22 billion takeover of Roku is cast as a bold strategic leap that fuses live sports and news with a 100-million-home streaming platform, creating the third-largest force in American television. Lachlan Murdoch frames the deal as a defining moment for the company, and the market greets it as a logical, growth-oriented consolidation.

Stampa europea continentale/ mediterranea
distaccopragmatismo

Fox has struck a preliminary deal to take over Roku for $22 billion (nearly €19 billion), using a mix of cash and stock. The transaction will widen the American group's streaming offering through the Roku Channel, which provides advertising-supported content.

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Upd. 10:12 PM3 languages · 5 outlets
5 outlets|3 languages|4 min read
Monday, June 15, 2026

Fox Acquires Roku in $22bn Streaming Gambit to Reshape US Television

The Murdoch-controlled media group will combine its sports and news assets with Roku’s 100 million households, creating America’s third-largest TV entity by audience share.

Fox Corporation has agreed to acquire the streaming platform Roku in a cash-and-share transaction valued at approximately $22 billion, a deal that marks the most consequential reshaping of the Murdoch media empire since the sale of its film and entertainment assets to Disney seven years ago. Announced on Monday, the acquisition will see Roku shareholders receive $160 per share — a mix of $96 in cash and 0.9693 Fox Class A shares — giving the Murdoch-controlled group roughly 73 per cent of the combined entity. The new company, expected to close in the first half of 2027 pending regulatory clearance, would instantly become the third-largest player in US television by audience share, spanning broadcast, cable, local stations and streaming.

Viewed from Washington, the transaction is a calculated bet that the future of television lies not in owning exclusive content alone but in controlling the interface through which audiences discover it. Lachlan Murdoch, Fox’s chief executive and eldest son of Rupert Murdoch, described the move as a “defining moment” that extends a strategy begun in 2019 when the company reoriented itself around live news and sports, then deepened in 2020 with the purchase of the free, ad-supported streamer Tubi. By adding Roku’s operating system and its own channel — which already commands 3 per cent of all US streaming viewership, according to Nielsen — Fox gains direct access to more than 100 million households globally, along with the first-party data and advertising relationships that have made Roku a formidable player in connected television. Analysts in London note that the deal effectively realises a vision Rupert Murdoch pursued for years: owning the digital “TV guide” that sits between viewers and the proliferating array of streaming services.

Across continental Europe and Latin America, the announcement was read as a signal that the ad-supported streaming model is entering a phase of aggressive consolidation. Italian and Spanish financial dailies highlighted that Roku, unlike subscription-driven rivals such as Netflix or Disney+, derives the vast majority of its revenue from advertising — 91 per cent in the most recent quarter — making it a natural fit for Fox’s portfolio of live sports and news, which remain heavily dependent on linear advertising. Brazilian outlets noted the local-currency equivalent of R$111 billion, underscoring the scale of the wager. Fox has pledged that Roku will continue to operate as an open, partner-friendly platform, but consumer advocates in multiple markets have cautioned that industry consolidation historically leads to higher subscription costs and reduced choice for viewers.

The deal also carries significant regulatory and competitive implications. Russian business press reported that the combined entity will control a substantial share of the US television advertising market, prompting scrutiny from antitrust authorities. Fox expects $400 million in annual cost savings from the merger, and Roku’s founder, Anthony Wood, will join the board of the new company. Yet the transaction arrives at a moment when the boundaries between content creation and distribution are blurring: Paramount’s recent record-breaking move on Warner Bros. Discovery, cited in Argentine coverage, suggests a broader realignment of legacy media assets. For Fox, the acquisition is its first major manoeuvre since Lachlan Murdoch cemented control of the family trust last year, and it positions the company to compete not just with streaming giants but with the tech platforms that increasingly dominate digital advertising.

Looking ahead, the success of the merger will hinge on whether Fox can preserve Roku’s neutrality while leveraging its real estate to promote its own services, including Tubi and the subscription-based Fox One, launched in 2025. If executed deftly, the combination could offer a template for how traditional broadcasters can navigate the transition from cable bundles to a streaming-first world. If mishandled, it risks alienating the very partners — Netflix, YouTube, Amazon — whose apps remain among the most watched on Roku devices today. For now, the wager is clear: in a fragmenting media landscape, the most valuable asset may not be the show itself, but the screen on which it is watched.

Source divergence

Finance · 5 outlets · 3 languages

50%Medium

How sources tell the same facts differently.

How They Split

Favorable50%
Neutral50%

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 3 languages

ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Stampa atlantica / anglosferaStampa europea continentale
Stampa atlantica / anglosfera/ economica
trionfopragmatismo

Fox's $22 billion takeover of Roku is cast as a bold strategic leap that fuses live sports and news with a 100-million-home streaming platform, creating the third-largest force in American television. Lachlan Murdoch frames the deal as a defining moment for the company, and the market greets it as a logical, growth-oriented consolidation.

Stampa europea continentale/ mediterranea
distaccopragmatismo

Fox has struck a preliminary deal to take over Roku for $22 billion (nearly €19 billion), using a mix of cash and stock. The transaction will widen the American group's streaming offering through the Roku Channel, which provides advertising-supported content.

This story appeared in

5 outlets · 3 languages

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