Fox acquires Roku for $22 billion to control the streaming home screen
Fox has agreed to acquire Roku for $22 billion in a cash-and-stock deal, valuing Roku at $160 per share. The acquisition aims to expand Fox's role in the streaming market by combining its content with Roku's widely used connected-TV platform and operating system. The merged entity is projected to become the third-largest player in U.S. television by share of viewing, integrating Roku's platform influence with Fox's live news, sports, and ad-supported services like Tubi and The Roku Channel.
Key Takeaways
- Fox will pay $96 in cash and 0.9693 shares of Class A stock for each Roku share.
- The combined entity will reach more than 100 million global streaming households.
- Roku founder and CEO Anthony Wood will join the Fox board of directors upon closing.
- Fox expects the transaction to generate approximately $400 million in annual cost synergies.
- The deal is projected to close in the first half of 2027, pending regulatory and shareholder approval.
Why It Matters
This acquisition shifts Fox from a content supplier to a primary gateway of the streaming ecosystem. By owning the operating system, Fox gains direct control over content discovery, first-party viewer data, and the high-margin connected-TV advertising market. It effectively shields Fox's assets, including Tubi and Fox News, from the discovery challenges inherent in third-party platforms. For the broader industry, this signals a massive consolidation phase where media giants seek to own the interface itself to combat eroding carriage fees from traditional cable. Analysts will be monitoring whether Fox can maintain Roku’s status as a 'partner-friendly' platform while prioritizing its own live sports and news services.
Additional Context
The acquisition follows significant growth milestones for both companies. Per MediaPost (April 2026), Roku recently surpassed 100 million global streaming households and holds a 55% market share in the U.S. streaming device market, significantly ahead of Amazon Fire TV’s 35%. This scale allows Fox to double its annual connected-TV advertising revenue, which Emarketer (June 2026) suggests was a primary driver for the $22 billion price tag. Strategic context provided by Forbes (June 2026) highlights that Fox has been incrementally building its digital stack since selling most entertainment assets to Disney in 2019. This includes the 2020 purchase of Tubi for $440 million—which reached 100 million monthly active users in 2025—and the launch of the Fox One subscription service. Per CNET (June 2026), the deal comes at a pivotal moment as streaming reached 48% of total U.S. television viewing in March 2026, up from just 25% in 2020. Institutional analysts, including those from PP Foresight (June 2026), note that the acquisition secures a 'direct route into the living room' for Fox’s live sports rights, including the NFL and FIFA World Cup. Morgan Stanley has reportedly provided $12 billion in bridge financing to support the cash portion of the deal, according to PR Newswire (June 2026). The merger follows a broader wave of industry consolidation, including the $110 billion Paramount-Skydance and Warner Bros. Discovery tie-up cleared by the Justice Department just days before Fox's announcement.
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