In a blockbuster media transaction, Fox announced Monday that it will acquire Roku for roughly $22 billion. The deal folds Roku’s device ecosystem, The Roku Channel and its advertising data into Fox’s streaming strategy, increasing the media conglomerate’s ability to target ads and broaden distribution of Fox-owned programming across more than 100 million households.
Fox said Roku will continue to operate as a standalone platform.
Fox CEO Lachlan Murdoch said this deal combines “the most valuable live content portfolio in video consumption with the preeminent streaming platform through which America watches it.”
What this deal means for streaming
For Fox, the purchase deepens its foothold in the ad-supported streaming market and complements existing assets, such as Tubi and Fox One, giving the company both content and direct access to viewer behavior. The move also intensifies competition among media owners who are racing to consolidate audiences, advertising inventory and data as streaming viewership and ad dollars shift away from traditional, linear TV.
Potential regulatory questions loom as the acquisition pairs a major content owner with a popular TV platform-maker that hosts rivals’ apps. That overlap could raise scrutiny to ensure Roku remains neutral toward competing streaming services.
While investors have reacted to the announcement with concern about the debt Fox plans to take on to finance the deal, analysts note the potential upside for the company from combining scale, ad targeting and live-sports reach.
“Fox is not just buying streaming scale. It is securing a direct route into the living room, a stronger advertising engine and a deeper relationship with viewers as the connected TV interface becomes one of the most valuable parts of the media chain,” PP Foresight analyst Paolo Pescatore said in a statement to CNET.
“This gives Fox greater control over discovery, data and monetisation at a time when TV viewing continues to shift away from traditional channels,” he added. “Bringing together premium content, live sports, advertising and platform distribution under one roof creates a compelling proposition. However, integrating a technology-led platform business with a traditional media company will be critical to unlocking the full strategic value of the deal.”
If regulators approve the deal, the combined company would reshape the streaming marketplace by bringing together premium content, live sports and local news with one of the largest TV distribution and ad platforms.
Fox expects the deal to close in the first half of 2027.
Read the full article here


