On the day that bids are due for parent company Warner Bros. Discovery, HBO boss Casey Bloys isn’t concerned about the future of the premium network.

Bloys, who is Chairman and CEO, HBO and Max Content, lifted the lid on his thoughts over a potential new owner at a press presentation in New York.

Asked whether he was concerned about his job or the future of HBO, Bloys said, “I’m not concerned.”

“I’ll tell you something that I told the team. I had a town hall a couple weeks ago, and I said the only thing you can do in this process, and the best thing you can do, is just focus on your job, which is making the most impactful programming in whatever genre. All of that theoretical… it’s kind of a waste of energy, because I don’t know what’s going to happen,” he said.

He added, “I don’t spend a lot of time trying to game it out, and even when we find out, the process takes a year, year and a half to close. So, it’s not something that we really have to think about. Now, that being said, I’m obviously very proud of what we’ve done at HBO and HBO Max, I would like to see that continue. We’ve all worked at HBO for a long time. I’m proud of our track record. But, you kind of have to go into this process with an open mind, a lot of it is out of our hands.”

The sale process of Warner Bros. Discovery has been the talk of both Hollywood and Wall Street for the past few weeks. Further bids are due today; David Ellison’s Paramount has already made three offers before the formal process started and Comcast and Netflix have both hired investment banks to explore an offer.

It’s thought that Paramount would like to buy the whole company, which includes HBO and its streaming service, as well as the film and television studio and cable network assets. The latter was set to be spun off into a new company, led by WBD’s current CFO Gunnar Wiedenfels, with David Zaslav running studios and streaming, but this may be usurped by a major transaction.

It’s understood that Netflix and Comcast are more interested in the studios and streaming; one Wall Street source floated the idea to Deadline that Comcast and Netflix could make a joint bid, with the NBCUniversal parent retaining HBO Max and the giant streamer the studios and IP.