Quick Summary
- Netflix abandoned a prospective Warner Bros. Discovery acquisition, eliminating significant debt exposure from consideration.
- NFLX declined approximately 16% between late January and February 23, before rallying 25–30% from those bottom levels.
- Advertising revenue exceeded 2.5x growth in 2025, reaching $1.5 billion, with targets approaching $3 billion for FY26.
- FY26 EPS forecasts hover around $3.14, representing approximately 24% annual expansion.
- The shares currently trade at roughly 39x trailing earnings, remaining beneath the 45x three-year average multiple.
Netflix has experienced a remarkable recovery over recent months — with a collapsed acquisition playing a significant role in that turnaround.
During late 2025, the streaming giant pursued a competitive bidding process for a substantial portion of Warner Bros. Discovery’s portfolio, encompassing studio facilities, intellectual property, and the possibility of acquiring the Max platform. The transaction carried an approximate $72 billion equity price tag, necessitating substantial leveraged financing — a dramatic departure from Netflix’s existing $14.5 billion debt position.
Netflix presented an opening bid, WBD countered with elevated terms, Netflix declined to match, and negotiations ceased. CFO commentary on the withdrawal was straightforward: “once it didn’t make financial sense… we moved on.”
Between late January and February 23, NFLX experienced roughly a 16% decline as deal speculation created investor uncertainty. When the acquisition discussions collapsed, market sentiment shifted dramatically. Shares recovered 25–30% from those depressed levels, with the PE ratio expanding from approximately 30x to around 39x trailing earnings currently. That valuation remains beneath the 45x three-year historical norm, and significantly lower than the 62.5x peak recorded last July.
Operational Performance Shows Strength
The more significant narrative extends beyond the failed transaction — fundamental business momentum continues accelerating. During FY25, Netflix achieved 16% revenue expansion while operating profit jumped approximately 30%, demonstrating meaningful operating leverage. Operating margin guidance points toward 31.5% in FY26, advancing from 29.5% over the trailing twelve months. These margins stood at merely 7–8% during 2018.
Approaching Q1 results, Netflix faces expectations of approximately $0.77 EPS alongside $12.17 billion in revenue — representing roughly 16% earnings growth and mid-teens top-line expansion. The company has exceeded analyst estimates in seven of its previous eight quarterly reports.
Analyst sentiment leans positive. Among 41 ratings issued during the past three months, 31 carry Buy recommendations while 10 maintain Hold positions, with consensus price targets averaging $114.61 — approximately 15% above present trading levels.
Advertising Revenue Presents Significant Opportunity
The primary catalyst for long-term value creation centers on advertising expansion. Netflix’s ad-supported membership tier reached 190 million subscribers by November 2025. Advertising revenue multiplied more than 2.5x during 2025 to $1.5 billion — remarkable expansion, while still representing a modest portion of the company’s $45 billion aggregate revenue.
Management has established targets of approximately $3 billion in advertising revenue for FY26, representing another near-doubling. As the advertising platform evolves — enhanced targeting capabilities, programmatic automation, strategic commercial partnerships — profit margins on this revenue stream could potentially exceed the traditional subscription model.
FY26 consensus earnings estimates land near $3.14, suggesting 24% growth. This represents a modest deceleration from the 27% expansion achieved in FY25, though entirely reasonable given the expanding revenue foundation.
From a technical perspective, near-term momentum favors continuation. The 20-day moving average has reversed upward while the 50-day indicator begins following suit. A sustained move above the $107 threshold would validate a more durable upward trajectory. The 200-day moving average continues declining, indicating the extended-term technical setup remains uncertain.

