Fox (FOX) just made the biggest move of its post-Disney era, agreeing to buy Roku for roughly $22 billion.
But the stock fell sharply the day the deal landed and kept sliding the next session, pushing Fox shares to a fresh 52-week low.
Now one of Wall Street’s most followed analysts has weighed in, and her verdict gives cautious shareholders something to watch.
What Bank of America said about Fox stock after the Roku deal
Bank of America Securities analyst Jessica Reif Ehrlich kept her sell rating on Fox and nudged her price target up to $54, as reported by TipRanks.
Ehrlich’s target tells investors what to watch. It sits just above where Fox’s more widely traded Class A shares closed and above the battered Class B stock, making this a verdict on the absence of near-term catalysts, not a call for more downside.
TipRanks credits Ehrlich, who covers communication-services names, including Netflix and Spotify, with an average return near 9% on rated stocks, so media investors tend to track her notes closely.
Why Fox shares fell after the $22 billion Roku purchase
Fox agreed to pay $160 per Roku share, splitting the payment between $96 in cash and 0.9693 of its Class A shares, according to the Fox Corporation announcement.
To fund the cash portion, Fox lined up a $12 billion loan, CNBC reported. A buyer taking on that much debt to acquire a target nearly its own size tends to spook the market, and it did.
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Fox Class A shares dropped about 17% on announcement day and slid further the next session.
Existing Fox holders will own roughly 73% of the combined company, with Roku investors taking the rest, according to a Fox SEC filing.
The Roku logic and the catalyst gap Bank of America sees
Roku reaches more than 100 million streaming households and provides Fox with a connected-TV platform and first-party viewer data, according to The Hollywood Reporter.
That helps Fox lean less on shrinking cable bundles and more on streaming and digital advertising, the fastest-growing slice of media revenue.
Ehrlich flagged a catch, however. The deal will not close until the first half of 2027, the roughly $400 million in promised cost savings take years to show up, and a costly future NFL rights renewal could pressure profits along the way.
In plain terms, the reward won’t show up until 2027 and beyond, while the risks arrive sooner.
How Fox stock compares with the market right now
The sell-off looks worse next to a rising market.






