Warner Bros. Inflated HBO Max Subscriber Numbers Ahead of Discovery Merger, Lawsuit AllegesHundreds of thousands of people could be eligible to join the class-action suit.

ByAmanda Breen

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Many people have strong feelings about the idea of an HBO Max and Discovery Plus streaming combo in 2023, the result of aWarnerMedia and Discovery merger.

But the Collinsville Police Pension Board, an Illinois-based shareholder of Warner Bros. Discovery stock, which it accepted in exchange for its pre-merger Class C common Discovery shares, has taken it a step further,The Wrapreported, filing a lawsuit in New York. The lawsuit alleges that the media conglomerate overstated theHBO Maxsubscriber base ahead of the deal.

AlthoughNetflixremains the dominant streaming service with upwards of 220 million global subscribers, perIndieWire, it's faced significant challenges this year — including the controversy around its intent to crack down onpassword sharing— opening up the playing field for other streamers.

Related:What's Going on With Netflix? Everything You Need to Know About the Company's Massive Fall

According to the lawsuit, which names Warner Bros. Discovery CEO David Zaslav and CFO Gunnar Wiedenfels as defendants and seeks monetary damages for three alleged SEC violations, the merging companies didn't disclose "adverse information," including the real number ofHBO Maxsubscribers.

我“WarnerMedia无远见的集中nvestments in streaming and ignoring its other business lines … [and] overstated the number of subscribers to HBO Max by as many as 10 million subscribers," the lawsuit states, "by including as subscribers AT&T customers who had received bundled access to HBO Max, but had not signed onto the service."

Discovery shares were valued at $24.78 at the time of the merger; as of Tuesday,Warner Bros. Discoveryshares were trading just above $11.

Related:AT&T Offloads Media Division, Announces Mega-Merger With Discovery, Inc.

More than 700 million shares are in question, the lawsuit claims, meaning "hundreds of thousands" of people could be eligible to partake in the federal securities class-action suit.

Wavy Line
Amanda Breen

Entrepreneur Staff

Features Writer

Amanda Breen is a features writer at Entrepreneur.com. She is a graduate of Barnard College and received an MFA in writing at Columbia University, where she was a news fellow for the School of the Arts.

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