• Washington
  • Wall Street
  • A.I.
  • Hollywood
  • Media
  • Fashion
  • Sports
  • Art
  • Join Puck Newsletters What is puck? Authors Podcasts Gift Puck Careers Events
  • Join Puck

    Directly Supporting Authors

    A new economic model in which writers are also partners in the business.

    Personalized Subscriptions

    Customize your settings to receive the newsletters you want from the authors you follow.

    Stay in the Know

    Connect directly with Puck talent through email and exclusive events.

  • What is puck? Newsletters Authors Podcasts Events Gift Puck Careers
Dry Powder

Hello, and welcome back to Dry Powder.

 

Thanks for being a part of Puck, our new media company covering the intersection of Wall Street, Washington, Silicon Valley, and Hollywood. 

 

In today's email: the fate of Shari Redstone, the future of CBS, the return of Steve Tusa, and Jeff Zucker's next opportunity. Plus some advice for Bill Ford.

shari redstone

Shari’s Choice, a Netflix Moment, & More

Notes on Wall Street’s new streaming math, GE fan fiction, and Ford’s meme-stock temptation.

William Cohan

WILLIAM D. COHAN

Earlier this week, Shari Redstone and Bob Bakish genuflected to Wall Street’s streaming demands by going as far as changing the name of their mashed-up company, ViacomCBS (which neither Wall Street nor Shari’s father ever wanted mashed up, by the way), to Paramount Global. Investors responded by dumping the stock, in one massive exhale, to celebrate the lipstick choreography.

 

On Friday, my partner Matt Belloni elucidated the many perceived flaws in the Redstone-Bakish strategy. Since that announcement on February 15, the ViacomCBS stock has been gutted 21.2 percent, reducing the company’s market value to $18 billion. (By comparison, Disney’s market value is $276 billion.) Last March, around the time that Bakish successfully launched Paramount+, the ViacomCBS stock was trading at a meme-inflated $100 a share, and now it’s trading at a little more than $28 a share. So, you know, what to do? 

 

For starters, Shari Redstone can thank her lucky stars that her cantankerous father, Sumner, is no longer around to witness this meltdown. He was a careful—by which I mean meticulous and relentless—observer of the Viacom and CBS stocks, and then when they were combined and then again after he split them apart. He would probably be ballistic now, not only because of the awful stock price, but presumably also because this is the sort of worst-nightmare scenario that convinced him to keep Shari far away from the business for all those years. I doubt he would be amused, as Matt has also observed, that his company’s biggest show, Yellowstone, has become the cornerstone of another company’s streaming platform. 

 

So what does Shari Redstone do now? I still think, as I suggested recently, that the answer for Paramount Global is Jeff Zucker. I understand he is available. He knows how to run a news division. He knows how to run an entertainment division. And his idea for streaming, CNN+, seems to be off to a promising start under Andrew Morse, a talented executive with whom I used to work at Bloomberg TV. Zucker is, at the very least, an example of what Paramount needs: someone who can shake things up, who has a vision, who can create value, and who can micromanage the company back to health and to a future with a much higher stock price. (A spokesman for ViacomCBS declined to comment.)

 

Of course, Zucker has baggage. As Matt and another of our partners, Dylan Byers, have pointed out, Zucker unambiguously broke company policy. But if the extent of his corporate mistakes was having a consensual relationship with a direct report and perhaps being too chummy with newsmakers (which we already knew), corporate America will probably give him another chance, especially when there is such an obvious situation that calls out for his unique skill set. The market, after all, cares more about performance than the private lives of consenting adults. (It’s true, don’t @ me.)

 

One aspect of Shari Redstone’s logic for re-combining CBS and Viacom, in 2019, was to make the combined company easier to sell, in a single transaction that could potentially be tax-free to her and her heirs. Certainly it helped, from a potential buyer’s point of view, that Wall Street valued the combined entity at a significant discount to what CBS and Viacom had been worth individually. Still, despite some of the prestige assets—such as CBS News, 60 Minutes, NFL rights, and Showtime—sitting inside the company, it’s difficult to imagine who would buy the combined company now. There’s lots of talk about Comcast being the most likely buyer, but I don’t see it, as acquisitive as Brian Roberts likes to be, because Comcast already owns NBC, requiring CBS to be offloaded straight away. So why bother? I’m sure Roberts would like to own Showtime and some of Viacom’s cable channels. (I’m also sure he’s thankful that Yellowstone is one of the few bright spots on Peacock.) But Comcast already owns Universal Studio, so he hardly needs Paramount. 

 

Let’s agree that Comcast is out. Disney is out. Amazon? I think out. Bezos already owns the Washington Post, so he doesn’t need the headache of CBS too. Apple? NFW. Microsoft? Google? Meta? I suppose, possibly, but why, why, why muck up the waters? At the current valuation—at which, of course, Shari would never sell—the company is starting to fall into the zone where it might appeal to a private equity bigwig.

 

“This is an exciting moment in the history of our company,” Redstone and Bakish wrote in their announcement, marking the new name. Actually, it’s not. And they have to pivot fast. Zucker would help Shari do that.

G.E. Fan Fiction

 

A reader passed on to me an article in Barrons, a publication that I revere and have written for, suggesting that GE is a buy. Careful readers of Puck will know that I have forcefully articulated the other side of this argument. And I’d like to point out that since Al Root wrote his article, earlier in February, the GE stock is down around another 8 percent. 

 

Look, it saddens me no end that the once great, powerful and highly respected GE is ending up in the dustbin of history. The first jet engine? The first lightbulb? The first electric cars? The first X-ray machine? The first manufacturer and distributor of electricity? All GE, once the world’s most valuable and respected company. Now, not so much. 

 

As I have written before, I am much more in the camp of Steve Tusa, the highly respected JPMorgan Chase research analyst, who was one of the first to call bullshit on GE, back in the days when Jeff Immelt was still running the company. Tusa has the equivalent of a sell recommendation on the GE stock and a price target of $50. That gives the GE stock, now trading around $92 a share, a long way to fall. I’m afraid that Al Root, who I don’t know, is simply misguided in his analysis. 

 

Let’s get real here. Since Larry Culp took over as C.E.O. of GE on October 1, 2018, the GE stock has tumbled around 10 percent while the S&P 500 is up 56 percent. In other words, GE has been a real stinker, where once upon a time the GE stock was an outperformer. (Whether that was justified is a whole ‘nother story.) Of course, that doesn’t mean Culp hasn’t found a way to enrich himself, at the expense of his shareholders. In fact, quite the opposite. As I have written here before, not only is Culp the first C.E.O. in GE history with a contract—which pays him an annual salary of $2.5 million, an annual bonus of another $3.5 million, and an annual stock grant of another $15 million, or a total of $21 million a year for those keeping score at home—but he also managed to find a way in 2020, in the depths of the pandemic, to re-cut the target stock price of his “inducement award” on another generous stock grant. 

 

Thanks to Culp’s fancy footwork with the GE board of directors in 2020, his new “Leadership Performance Share Award” has resulted in Culp receiving another 9.3 million GE shares—around 1.16 million shares after the 8:1 reverse stock split that Culp engineered last year—worth around $110 million to him these days, as long as he stays at GE through the term of his contract in 2024, or 2025 if the parties to it agree. And he’s not slated to go anywhere. In fact, he’s decided he will be the C.E.O. of what remains of GE—its jet-engine business—after the company breaks itself up into three parts and disappears. The message here is pretty much the opposite of what it should be: Corporate executives should get rich if their shareholders get richer, not the other way around. 

Ford’s Netflix Moment

 

Ford stock exploded upward Friday on a Bloomberg report that the company is considering spinning off its EV division. It raised the question: are the higher multiples for pure play EV companies versus traditional automakers a byproduct of Tesla mania, or are there fundamental economic justifications for the market to price companies like Lucid and Rivian so highly? 

 

Of course, Tesla mania has influenced the stock prices of the other publicly traded electric car companies, such as Lucid and Rivian. Tesla’s market value is still near $900 billion, despite having fallen nearly 30 percent since the first of the year. (By comparison, with far less of a track record of actually producing electric vehicles, Rivian’s market value is $60 billion and Lucid’s is $44 billion. Both Rivian’s and Lucid’s stocks are down 35 percent so far in 2022.) Ford, meanwhile, which has been around for nearly 120 years, has a market value of $72 billion. It trades at a value equal to about half its revenue, while Tesla trades at around 16 times its revenue. If Ford traded at 16 times its revenue, the company would be worth some $2.2 trillion, or about one Microsoft. So you can see how it would be possible that some investment banker somewhere came to the conclusion that Ford shareholders would be better off owning a share of Ford and a share of Ford’s electric vehicle division, given the massive discrepancy in valuation between OG car makers and the EV car makers. 

 

But, if I were advising Bill Ford, which I’m not, I’d tell him to give this idea a pass. For starters, the ridiculous valuations of the pure play EV car companies will continue to contract as interest rates rise, supply chains stay challenged, and the euphoria comes out of the balloons. In short order, the pure play EV stocks will be valued more rationally. More important, in my opinion, is the fact that if Ford is just an OG fossil-fuel guzzling car company, then that’s a company without much future and a whole lot of liabilities. That sounds to me like a recipe for disaster. 

 

This idea brings to mind the gambit that Reed Hastings once made at Netflix when he proposed splitting Netflix’s fading red-envelope disk business from its streaming business. It was Hastings’ way of trying to point investors to the future of Netflix’s growing and powerful streaming business. But investors hated the idea of the split and Hastings was smart enough to pull the plug on it after proposing it publicly. 

 

That was the right decision for Hastings, Netflix, and Netflix’s shareholders. Around the time that Hastings proposed the split between a dying business and a thriving business, in September 2011, Netflix’s stock was trading around $22 a share. Now it’s $391 a share, an increase of nearly 1,700 percent in a decade (and that’s with Netflix’s stock down 35 percent year to date). So Mr. Ford and Ford management, be smart here. Follow the Netflix model. Let the relationship between Ford’s hot electric vehicle division and its gas-guzzling division develop organically, with the EV business gradually replacing the OG business and then getting rewarded by the market. That’s what happened at Netflix; the same thing can happen at Ford if you are patient enough and wise enough to let it happen.

FOUR STORIES WE'RE TALKING ABOUT

cocktail

Shari vs. Wall Street

ViacomCBS did everything that Wall Street asked—and investors responded by urinating all over the stock. So much for streaming?

MATTHEW BELLONI

money bag

Putin's Quasi War

Is this the outbreak of war in Ukraine? It certainly looks that way. But as with everything involving Putin, nothing is as it seems.

JULIA IOFFE

ufo

Jeff & Allison's Next moves

The most-watched couple in media are generating tabloid-level attention as they calculate their next professional steps.

DYLAN BYERS

card

The Power Behind Zazworld?

It’s the Newhouses, not John Malone, who will have the leverage to help Zaslav steer Warner Bros. Discovery toward streaming glory.

WILLIAM D. COHAN

 
swash divider
Facebook Twitter Instagram LinkedIn

You received this message because you signed up to receive emails from Puck.

 

Was this email forwarded to you?

Sign up for Puck here.

 

Sent to {{customer.email}}

Unsubscribe

 

Puck is published by Heat Media LLC.
64 Bank Street
New York, NY 10014

 

For support, just reply to this e-mail.

For brand partnerships, email ads@puck.news

SEE THE ARCHIVES

SHARE
Try Puck for free

Sign up today to join the inside conversation at the nexus of Wall Street, Washington, A.I., Hollywood, and more.

Already a member? Log In


  • Daily articles and breaking news
  • Personal emails directly from our authors
  • Gift subscriber-only stories to friends & family
  • Unlimited access to archives

  • Exclusive bonus days of select newsletters
  • Exclusive access to Puck merch
  • Early bird access to new editorial and product features
  • Invitations to private conference calls with Puck authors

Exclusive to Inner Circle only



Latest Articles from Wall Street

Geoffroy van Raemdonck
William D. Cohan • February 20, 2022
The Saks Financial Colonoscopy
Amid a torrent of bankruptcy filings, a blunt declaration by Saks Global’s newly appointed chief restructuring officer lays out precisely what went wrong and when, and who got screwed hardest—plus which risk-hungry investors are likely to call the shots moving forward. As it turns out, the company’s capital structure became “unsustainable” almost immediately after its $2.7 billion acquisition of Neiman Marcus Group in December 2024.
David Ellison
William D. Cohan • February 20, 2022
The Ellison Way of Parenting
David Ellison’s latest schemes to wrest Warner Bros. from Netflix have proved insufficient after his previous negotiating tactics ran up the price. Meanwhile, he’s losing the respect of the WBD guys across the table. But will his dad come to the rescue with another, say, $10 billion to bail him out?
Patrick Drahi
William D. Cohan • February 20, 2022
A History of Creditor-on-Creditor Violence
Wall Street invented the coercive liability management exercise, which allows companies to play their creditors against one another as they extract beneficial terms for themselves—a now-routinized tradition referred to as “creditor-on-creditor violence.” But now Apollo, Oaktree, BlackRock, and JPMorgan Chase are teaming up to put an end to this mess.


Larry Ellison, David Ellison
William D. Cohan • February 20, 2022
The Zaz–Ellison Dagger Contest
Warner Bros. Discovery’s most recent S.E.C. filing reveals the latest battle lines between the company and its hostile suitor. In particular, the document evinces a deep distrust of Paramount Skydance’s proposed deal financing, recasting the $108 billion all-cash offer as an $87 billion L.B.O. that could fall apart before closing.
David Zaslav
William D. Cohan • February 20, 2022
What Is Zaz TV Really Worth?
The battle for Warner Bros. Discovery is increasingly coming down to how Netflix and Paramount Skydance value the declining TV assets (and CNN) that David Zaslav is determined to separate from the Warners mothership. Versant, which just started trading on Nasdaq this week, may provide the answer.
greg abel
William D. Cohan • February 20, 2022
Make Berkshire Hathaway Great Again?
Greg Abel, the handpicked successor to Warren Buffett, faces one of the most exalted and daunting jobs in finance: determining what to do with the staggering $358 billion bequeathed to him by the most legendary investor of his generation. Herewith, three proposals for what Abel should buy with all that cash.


David Ellison, Larry Ellison
William D. Cohan • February 20, 2022
Zaz Is From Mars, the Ellisons Are From Venus
Murmurs from sources close to the Warner Bros. Discovery deal illuminate the latest machinations surrounding the Paramount-Netflix showdown—and where this thing is headed.


Get access to this story

Enter your email for a free preview of Puck’s full offering, including exclusive articles, private emails from authors, and more.

Verify your email and sign in by clicking the link we just sent.

Already a member? Log In


Start 14 Day Free Trial for Unlimited Access Instead →



Latest Articles from Wall Street

Larry Ellison
William D. Cohan • February 20, 2022
“Larry Didn’t Show Up, and David Got Ahead of His Skis”
Everything you wanted to know about the Warner Bros. Discovery board’s doubts with the Ellisons’ bid (but were afraid to ask) is revealed in its 14D-9 filing—a mother lode of alleged Paramount missteps, from squabbles over consent provisions and breakup fee reimbursements to junior lien debt and the financial capacity of the world’s fifth-richest man.
larry ellison david ellison
William D. Cohan • February 20, 2022
Ellison Irrevocable Trust Issues
Despite their numerous bids for all of WBD, a rift has opened between the principals at Paramount Skydance and the board and advisors of their target company—at least for now. Can money heal all wounds?
larry ellison david ellison
William D. Cohan • February 20, 2022
The Ellisons at the Gates
Paramount has raised the stakes in its hostile bid for Warner Bros. Discovery, and may yet go higher. Now Netflix must decide how much it wants to venture into junk credit-rating territory, or play games with its stock, to secure the prize.


Larry Ellison, David Ellison
William D. Cohan • February 20, 2022
Netflix’s $83B Math & The Ellison Hostile Meter
A talmudic reading of the mishegas following the $83 billion Netflix-WBD deal: Zaz’s personal economics; the likelihood that this turns hostile; the unusual consortium of banks underwriting the deal; the value of the Gunnar stub; regulatory open questions; the $5.8 billion breakup fee; and more.
Leon Black
William D. Cohan • February 20, 2022
The Epstein Monologues
The recently released, one-sided correspondence between Jeffrey Epstein and Leon Black illustrates a discourse between a hustler and a billionaire with too much money and too little time on his hands. So why couldn’t Black get rid of him sooner?
Mike Mayo
William D. Cohan • February 20, 2022
Wall Street Enters the “Cockroach” Wars
The multitrillion-dollar growth of private credit is fueling an acrimonious debate on Wall Street over whether this surging shadow market is the future of finance or the seed corn of the next crisis. Is Rowan right? Or Dimon? Or Gundlach? As Mike Mayo put it, someone is wrong.


david zaslav
William D. Cohan • February 20, 2022
Zaz the World Turns
News, notes, and palace intrigues from all sides of what might become the largest M&A deal of the year: the three-way tussle for David Zaslav’s Warner Bros. Discovery.
Get access to this story

Enter your email to get access to one article and free previews of our private emails from Puck authors and editors.

OR

Already a Member? Sign in



Latest Articles from Wall Street

wall street 1929
William D. Cohan • February 20, 2022
The Spirit of ’29
Financial history doesn’t repeat itself, but it does often rhyme. Amid a speculative frenzy, deregulation, trade wars, and a handful of megacaps propping up the markets, some of Wall Street’s brightest minds wonder whether 2026 might resemble 1929.
Marc Rowan
William D. Cohan • February 20, 2022
Street Credit
A recent string of bankruptcies and defaults suggests some challenges in the seemingly indomitable private credit market. And yet, according to some O.G.s, things have never been better. Apollo’s Marc Rowan lays bare the risks and rewards.
David Ellison
William D. Cohan • February 20, 2022
Ellisonology 101
In his first earnings call as C.E.O. of Paramount Skydance, David Ellison offered a masterclass in corporate optimism, promising “synergies” and artfully dodging questions about a possible Warner Bros. Discovery takeover. Alas, the time to act is here.


Michael Bloomberg
William D. Cohan • February 20, 2022
What Does Bloomberg Want for Bloomberg L.P.?
A modest proposal for how New York’s $100 billion man could bequeath his namesake, and its monumental profits in perpetuity.
Jim Chanos
William D. Cohan • February 20, 2022
The Mag Seven Itch
The market is notching record highs for the so-called Magnificent Seven—or should that be Mag 10?—but a subterranean counternarrative is forming as once-secure food and consumer staples crater, and cracks emerge in the $3 trillion private-credit boom.
Brian Roberts
William D. Cohan • February 20, 2022
The Brian Roberts–WBD Bull Case
A new analyst note highlights a heightened sense around Wall Street that Comcast co-C.E.O. Brian Roberts doesn’t merely want WBD, but also truly needs the company—and has a real shot at the asset.


Jamie Dimon
William D. Cohan • February 20, 2022
Jamie’s Castle in the Sky
Dimon’s $3 billion (or maybe as much as $5 billion, really) new headquarters is the physical embodiment of his fortress balance sheet and a metaphor for our fractional banking system. But the seeming permanence of its bronze facade shouldn’t fool old Wall Street hands, who know nothing is forever.


  • Terms
  • Privacy
  • Contact
  • FAQ
  • Careers
© 2026 Heat Media All rights reserved.
Create an account

Already a member? Log In

CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Google
CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Google
OR YOUR EMAIL

OR

Use Email & Password Instead

USE EMAIL & PASSWORD
Password strength:

OR

Use Another Sign-Up Method

Become a member

All of the insider knowledge from our top tier authors, in your inbox.

Create an account

Already a member? Log In

Verify your email!

You should receive a link to log in at .

I DID NOT RECEIVE A LINK

Didn't get an email? Check your spam folder and confirm the spelling of your email, and try again. If you continue to have trouble, reach out to fritz@puck.news.

CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Google
CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Google
CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Apple
CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Apple
OR USE EMAIL & PASSWORD
Password strength:

OR
Log In

Not a member yet? Sign up today

Log in with Google
Log in with Google
Log in with Apple
Log in with Apple
OR USE EMAIL & PASSWORD
Don't have a password or need to reset it?

OR
Verify Account

Verify your email!

You should receive a link to log in at .

I DID NOT RECEIVE A LINK

Didn't get an email? Check your spam folder and confirm the spelling of your email, and try again. If you continue to have trouble, reach out to fritz@puck.news.

YOUR EMAIL

Use a different sign in option instead

Member Exclusive

Get access to this story

Create a free account to preview Puck’s full offering, including exclusive articles, private emails from authors, and more.

Already a member? Sign in

Free article unlocked!

You are logged into a free account as unknown@example.com

ENJOY 1 FREE ARTICLE EACH MONTH

Subscribe today to join the inside conversation at the nexus of Wall Street, Washington, A.I., Hollywood, and more.

START 14-DAY FREE TRIAL

  • Daily articles and breaking news
  • Personal emails directly from our authors
  • Gift subscriber-only stories to friends & family
  • Unlimited access to archives
  • Bookmark articles to create a Reading List
  • Quarterly calls with industry experts from the power corners we cover