Paramount's hostile $108 billion takeover attempt of Warner Bros. just got a fascinating twist—backed by billions from Jared Kushner's network alongside sovereign funds from Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and Abu Dhabi. Here's the kicker: these heavyweight investors are writing massive checks without demanding board representation or governance rights. Even more intriguing? This structure conveniently sidesteps a CFIUS national security review. Classic case of strategic capital deployment meets regulatory chess.
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FomoAnxiety
· 12-14 05:08
The game Kusner and his crew are playing is really ruthless—bypassing censorship and still not wanting a say in things. It's really interesting.
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TokenomicsTinfoilHat
· 12-13 12:24
Kushner and his group are playing it really carefully, bypassing CFIUS is a brilliant move. Just putting in money without any say? Wouldn't that be giving it away for free? Haha
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HappyMinerUncle
· 12-11 21:05
Kushner and his team are really good at playing, cleverly bypassing CFIUS review.
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Deconstructionist
· 12-11 21:05
Kushner and his team are really ruthless with this trick, finding ways to bypass CFIUS review...
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SlowLearnerWang
· 12-11 21:04
I need to take a breather... Can you still play with $10.8 billion? Kushner and his team entered the scene but didn't even want a board seat. This tactic is quite clever.
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gas_fee_therapy
· 12-11 21:03
Kushner is making a move, this game is truly brilliant.
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ColdWalletAnxiety
· 12-11 21:03
Kushner and his team are really good at playing, bypassing CFIUS review is indeed outrageous.
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BlockDetective
· 12-11 20:43
Damn, the Kushner family is doing this, basically playing in a regulatory vacuum.
Paramount's hostile $108 billion takeover attempt of Warner Bros. just got a fascinating twist—backed by billions from Jared Kushner's network alongside sovereign funds from Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and Abu Dhabi. Here's the kicker: these heavyweight investors are writing massive checks without demanding board representation or governance rights. Even more intriguing? This structure conveniently sidesteps a CFIUS national security review. Classic case of strategic capital deployment meets regulatory chess.