Fox Corp. accelerates into ad-supported streaming with $22 billion Roku deal
Fox Corp. has announced an agreement to acquire connected TV platform and device manufacturer Roku for $22 billion. The transaction, slated to close in the first half of 2027 pending regulatory approval, will combine Roku's operating system with Fox's Tubi platform to form a highly integrated ad-supported streaming business. The strategic deal allows Fox to heavily scale its distribution and CTV advertising footprint without a massive spend on original programming.
Key Takeaways
- Fox acquires 100% of Roku for approximately $22 billion, a 14% premium over recent market prices as of June 2026.
- The combined entity will control 5.1% of total U.S. television viewing, trailing only YouTube and Netflix.
- Roku currently holds 28% of the connected TV market, leading rivals Samsung Tizen (23%) and Amazon Fire TV.
- Fox expects to achieve $400 million in annual cost synergies following the deal's projected close in early 2027.
- The transaction includes a mix of $96 in cash and approximately 0.97 shares of Fox Class A stock per Roku share.
Why It Matters
The deal signals a strategic shift for Fox from content supplier to platform gatekeeper. By owning the hardware and OS that delivers rival apps, Fox secures a perpetual ad-revenue stream and primary placement for Fox Sports and News without participating in the multi-billion dollar content arms race. It essentially creates a vertically integrated FAST (Free Ad-supported Streaming TV) powerhouse that leverages reach over prestige content. Broadly, this move forces competitors like Amazon and Samsung to defend their OS dominance. The critical signal to watch is the SEC and regulatory reaction to a major content owner controlling a top-tier distribution gateway.
Additional Context
The Fox-Roku tie-up arrives during a period of massive consolidation across the media landscape. Per CBS News (June 2026), the Department of Justice recently cleared a $110 billion merger between Paramount Skydance and Warner Bros. Discovery, signaling a more permissive regulatory environment for media verticalization. This wave follows the official cancellation of Venu Sports, the joint venture between Disney, Fox, and Warner Bros. Discovery, which was permanently scrapped in January 2025 after a federal judge granted a preliminary injunction in an antitrust lawsuit filed by Fubo. In the wake of Venu's collapse, Fox has reoriented its streaming strategy toward direct platform ownership. Financial analysts emphasize that the Roku deal significantly diversifies Fox’s revenue away from declining linear cable fees. Per Emarketer (June 2026), acquiring Roku is projected to more than double Fox’s annual connected TV (CTV) ad revenues. This growth is bolstered by Tubi’s momentum; per Nielsen (February 2026), Tubi recently reached a 6.2% share of total ad-supported streaming viewing, surpassing platforms like Peacock and Pluto TV. Simultaneously, Roku reported surpassing 100 million global streaming households in April 2026, confirming its status as the leading gateway for third-party streaming apps. The integration of these two massive user bases—Tubi’s 100 million active users and Roku’s 100 million households—positions Fox as the second-largest worldwide player in ad-supported CTV viewing hours behind YouTube, according to Omdia (June 2026).
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