Wall Street just made it official: Warner Bros. Discovery is a junk bond company. S&P Global Ratings downgraded the media giant to BB+, stripping it of investment-grade status and signaling that WBD’s linear TV baggage has become too heavy to carry. This isn’t just a slap on the wrist—it’s a warning shot for every legacy media company still straddling the fault line between old money and new models.
The downgrade, delivered with a negative outlook, shows S&P’s confidence in WBD’s long-term financial trajectory is eroding—even as the company doubles down on streaming and studio growth. The math just doesn’t add up: WBD has chipped away at its $40 billion debt pile since the 2022 merger, but it still hasn’t hit the 3.5x leverage ratio needed to earn back investment-grade respect. S&P now expects EBITDA to average around $9 billion through 2026, with leverage stuck at 4.3x in 2025 and 3.9x the following year.
So what’s the anchor? Two words: linear TV.
S&P forecasts that EBITDA from WBD’s global linear networks will drop 20% to $6.5 billion. The bleeding is coming from all sides—an 11% plunge in ad revenue, rising sports rights costs, and a projected 8% hit to distribution revenue. And then there’s the looming loss of NBA rights after the 2024–2025 season, which could hollow out WBD’s sports portfolio and leave TNT scrambling for relevance. Unlike peers with stickier sports assets or niche channels, WBD is over-indexed on general entertainment—a category losing altitude fast.
Meanwhile, streaming and studios are growing—but not fast enough to patch the leak. The company’s streaming bet, centered on the recently rebranded HBO Max, is pushing into new international markets, with a U.K. launch on deck for 2026. But S&P notes that these expansions will drive up content and marketing costs just as linear’s revenue base collapses underneath.
And then there’s the shadow looming over all of this: a possible corporate breakup.
S&P took direct aim at the potential for a WBD split, which CEO David Zaslav and CFO and Chief Slash Officer Gunnar Wiedenfels have floated in recent months. While nothing’s confirmed, the company already reorganized in December 2024 into two distinct divisions: Streaming & Studios and Global Linear Networks. That structure will be finalized by mid-2025 and is widely seen as a dress rehearsal for a spin-off. S&P’s take? If WBD pulls the trigger, it would be credit negative—especially for the linear side, which would lose the narrative (and revenue cover) of its sexier streaming sibling.
Even if the company stays intact, S&P isn’t expecting a financial glow-up. Analysts project only modest debt reduction over the next few years, with WBD continuing to prioritize international expansion and platform investment over paying down debt. Translation: the long game in streaming might make sense strategically, but it doesn’t move the needle fast enough to satisfy bondholders. Not when the cash cow is dying in the barn.
So what’s the real story here?
The downgrade isn’t just about WBD—it’s about time running out. Media companies have spent the last decade talking up transformation while propping up legacy assets. But now Wall Street’s patience is thinning. Streaming is the future, sure. But the past is still on the books. And it’s bleeding red.