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The massive AT&T-Time Warner deal could mean up to $390 million in fees for Wall Street banks

wolf of wall street
wolf of wall street

(Mary Cybulski/Paramount Pictures)

AT&T has agreed to buy Time Warner for a whopping $107.50 a share, or $85.4 billion.

If completed, the deal would be the largest of the year, and it could make for a huge payday for the Wall Street banks advising the two companies.

JPMorgan, Bank of America Merrill Lynch, and Perella Weinberg are advising AT&T on the buy side, according to Thomson Reuters, with JPMorgan and Bank of America Merrill Lynch providing a $40 billion bridge loan.

Allen & Co., Citigroup, and Morgan Stanley are advising Time Warner on the sell side.

Here's what those firms could earn in fees, according to the consultant Freeman & Co.:

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  • AT&T buy-side advisory: $90 million to $120 million to the advisory group (Perella Weinberg, JPMorgan, Bank of America)

  • AT&T $40 billion bridge loan: $110 million to $130 million to arrangers (led by JPMorgan and Bank of America)

  • Time Warner sell-side advisory: $110 million to $140 million to advisory group (Allen & Co., Citigroup, Morgan Stanley)

On Monday, four more acquisitions were announced, which together could provide an additional $200 million in advisory fees to Wall Street banks.

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