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Your streaming experience just shifted in ways you might not notice for months. Fox Corporation’s $22 billion acquisition of Roku represents a fundamental declaration that controlling the platform control matters more than owning content in today’s streaming landscape.
Fox pays premium prices to control how 100 million households access television.
Fox will shell out $160 per Roku share through a mix of $96 cash and Fox Class A stock. The combined entity will have Fox shareholders owning roughly 73% and Roku investors holding the remaining 27%. The deal, expected to close in early 2027 pending regulatory approval, represents Fox’s largest acquisition ever and signals a strategic shift from content dependency to platform control.
Roku’s real value lies in data and advertising technology, not streaming dongles.
Roku commands the living rooms of over 100 million households globally as the leading connected TV operating system in North America. Your Roku device tracks substantial viewing behavior across streaming services, though major apps like Netflix limit what data Roku can access. Roku’s first-party data goldmine, combined with its sophisticated ad-insertion technology and The Roku Channel’s growing viewership, creates an advertising powerhouse that knows viewing patterns traditional TV ratings can only estimate.
Fox trades content dependency for platform control in the streaming wars.
Fox brings premium live content—NFL games, FIFA World Cup, Fox News—that streaming platforms need for audience retention. But ownership of Roku’s operating system flips the script entirely. Instead of negotiating for app placement like every other network, Fox can guarantee top billing for its content while leveraging cross-platform viewing data. Think of it as Fox creating its own iOS ecosystem, except for your television.
Investors question whether a media company can execute a $22 billion tech platform strategy.
Fox’s stock tumbled double digits on announcement day, reflecting Wall Street’s skepticism about legacy media companies managing complex technology platforms. The bigger question involves whether streaming giants will tolerate a Fox-controlled Roku potentially adjusting app prominence or revenue-sharing terms. Major streamers now face negotiating with a platform owner who’s also their content rival.
The acquisition will create the third-largest player in US television by share of viewing. Fox just bought what may be the most valuable remote control in America, betting that whoever controls the gateway to your attention wins streaming’s next phase.
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