RJ Hamster
Leviathan Metals is moving from thesis to drill bit…
A message from our partners at Huge Alerts

LVXFF Looks to Be Quietly Setting Up One of the Most Interesting Early-Stage Discovery Stories in the Strategic Metals Space Right Now!
Leviathan Metals Corp. (OTC: LVXFF) just took a meaningful step forward with the completion of a high-resolution airborne electromagnetic survey at its Central Project in Botswana’s Kalahari Copper Belt.
This isn’t background noise work, it’s the kind of geophysics that directly feeds drill targeting.
The survey mapped more than 20 kilometers of the exact D’Kar–Ngwako Pan contact that hosts every major copper deposit in the region, and it outlined a large domal structure sitting right next to MMG’s Khoemacau system. That data is now being processed into drill targets, which means the story is moving from “geology thesis” to “drill bit about to test it.”
What makes this more compelling is the setup underneath it. LVXFF is building a multi-commodity angle with copper in Botswana, uranium exposure near a major energy district, and high-grade silver-lead-zinc in Bosnia, all in stable mining jurisdictions with real discovery history.
The company has also expanded its Botswana footprint to roughly 590 square kilometers and is now clearly transitioning toward a 2026 drilling phase with multiple catalysts lining up.
In a market where investors are starting to reward real catalysts over narratives, Leviathan Metals Corp. is starting to move into that rare zone where early-stage exploration meets real near-term action.
Exclusive Content
Warner Bros. Discovery’s Blockbuster Deal Faces a Hostile Rewrite
Reported by Jeffrey Neal Johnson. Article Published: 4/15/2026.

Key Points
- Elite directors and writers have collectively voiced their opposition to the consolidation of both major legacy film and television studios.
- The United Kingdom Competition and Markets Authority has launched an investigation into the potential impacts of the deal on international markets.
- Leadership within the organization recently liquidated a substantial portion of its holdings during the current quarter as institutional activity grows.
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In the high-stakes world of media, the proposed $110 billion merger between Paramount Skydance (NASDAQ: PSKY) and Warner Bros. Discovery (NASDAQ: WBD) was billed as a showstopper. The strategic goal was straightforward: build a global entertainment-sector titan with the scale to dominate the fiercely competitive streaming wars.
But what was meant to be a triumphant final act is facing a hostile rewrite — not from a corporate rival, but from the industry’s creative core. A public rejection from more than 1,000 of Hollywood’s writers, directors and actors has put the deal’s future in doubt.
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This talent backlash is the latest visible crack in a foundation already shaken by insider skepticism and looming regulatory hurdles. For investors holding or watching WBD stock, the convergence of these forces creates a particularly precarious situation, warranting a closer look at whether this blockbuster deal is headed for a tragic ending.
Facing Fire From All Sides: The Merger’s Opposition
A media company’s most valuable assets aren’t studio lots or film vaults but the creative minds that produce the content audiences want. That human capital has become a central risk in the WBD–Paramount story.
Hollywood’s open letter, signed by A-list talent, is a forceful demonstration of industry collective power. Citing fears that consolidation will reduce competition, limit opportunities and narrow creative diversity, creators have drawn a line in the sand. If top-tier talent migrates to more creator-friendly environments — such as Netflix, Inc. (NASDAQ: NFLX) — the merged company could face a serious content shortfall.
Paramount quickly responded, attempting to head off a talent exodus. The company pledged to greenlight at least 30 feature films annually and to preserve the creative independence of its studio brands — an implicit acknowledgment of creators’ influence and an effort to reassure investors about the content pipeline.
While WBD contends with this industry dissent, a second front is opening overseas. The United Kingdom’s Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) has launched a formal probe into the merger — a development that introduces a significant, tangible risk.
A CMA investigation can be lengthy and can conclude in several outcomes, each presenting challenges for the deal. Regulators could require divestitures of valuable assets, such as TV networks or film libraries, as a condition of approval. In the worst case, they could block the merger in a major international market, fundamentally changing the deal’s financial calculus.
Red Flags on Wall Street: Debt, Doubt, and Executive Exits
External pressures are mounting, and warning signs are flashing from inside the company and across the market. The most telling evidence comes from Warner Bros.’ own leadership: in March 2026 a wave of insider selling suggested a notable lack of confidence among those closest to the business.
CEO David Zaslav sold shares valued at roughly $113.16 million, while other senior executives — including the chief financial officer — sold more than $140 million combined.
That level of insider selling is a stark signal: leadership appears to be reducing personal exposure ahead of expected volatility, a move that speaks louder than any corporate statement. Market sentiment reflects similar caution. As of March 31, short interest in Warner Bros. Discovery jumped 24.5% month over month, indicating a growing number of traders betting the stock will fall.
Those doubts are compounded by WBD’s recent financials. The company entered the negotiation under strain: its latest Q4 2025 earnings report missed expectations, showing a loss of $0.10 per share versus an anticipated profit, alongside a 5.7% year-over-year revenue decline. That combination points to operational headwinds.
Against this backdrop, the stock’s price-to-earnings ratio (P/E) of 94 looks disconnected from the company’s current fundamentals. A P/E at that level implies near-perfect execution and significant growth — assumptions now challenged by the real possibility of a messy, contentious or failed merger.
The Final Cut: A Risky Bet for Investors
The proposed Warner Bros. Discovery–Paramount Skydance merger has shifted from a straightforward M&A play into a high-stakes drama driven by converging risks.
A public revolt from its most essential asset — the creative community — is escalating alongside a serious regulatory challenge and clear signals of doubt from leadership and the market. For investors, the theoretical long-term gains are now overshadowed by immediate and substantial obstacles to successful execution.
The current landscape presents a speculative, unfavorable risk-reward profile. The path forward for WBD’s stock will depend on how the company navigates these issues. Investors should watch three developments closely: progress or further breakdowns in talks with Hollywood’s guilds; preliminary findings from the United Kingdom’s antitrust probe; and management’s responses on the upcoming earnings call, scheduled for May 7, 2026.
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