NTLFX_header

Netflix after earnings: a strong quarter, a more expensive 2026

Equities 5 minutes to read
Ruben Dalfovo
Ruben Dalfovo

Investment Strategist

Key takeaways

  • Netflix beats Q4 expectations, but guidance points to softer near-term profitability.

  • Higher content spend and the Warner deal shift the story from margins to reinvestment.

  • For long-term investors, the key is ARPU, churn, and ad momentum, not one quarter’s mood.


The moment: why the market blinked

On 20 January 2026, Netflix reports fourth-quarter 2025 earnings, and the business itself looks fine. The share price dips into the close and then slips further after hours, not because the quarter disappoints, but because the outlook asks investors for patience.

That reaction is classic Netflix. The company often chooses long-term growth over short-term comfort, and markets tend to price comfort first.

Here is the simple tension. The quarter comes in a bit better than expected, with healthy revenue growth, improving profitability, and solid cash generation. But the next steps, especially the first-quarter profitability guide and the full-year margin outlook, look a bit softer than the market had pencilled in.

Before diving into the details, the dot chart below is a quick visual guide to what happened versus expectations. Each dot shows how a key line item compares with Bloomberg consensus. Green means better than expected. Red means weaker than expected. Grey is broadly in line. The pattern matters more than the exact numbers: the “past quarter” dots are mostly friendly, while the “next quarter and year” dots lean more cautious on profitability.

netflix_beat_miss_dotplot1
Source: Bloomberg and Saxo Bank analysis.

For newer investors, this is a useful lesson. The share price is a vote on the next 12 months, not a reward for the last 12 weeks.

The quarter: the machine keeps running

Netflix’s fourth quarter supports the “upgrade” narrative it has been pushing. It still grows, but it increasingly behaves like a mature business, focusing on margins, efficiency, and cash.

Scale remains a strength. Netflix passes another milestone in paid memberships, which matters because scale is not just bragging rights. It lowers unit costs, improves bargaining power, and gives Netflix more room to test new products without putting the core subscription engine at risk.

Engagement holds up too. Netflix points to steady viewing in the second half of 2025, with Netflix originals doing more of the heavy lifting. In streaming, steady engagement is what makes pricing power possible. If people use the service often, they are less likely to cancel after a price change, and advertisers are more willing to pay for attention.

The guide: profits do not vanish, they get postponed

The market’s unease is not really about what Netflix just delivered. It is about what Netflix chooses to do next.

Management signals higher spending in 2026, with the impact felt earlier in the year and benefits skewing later. Translation: the company pulls forward investment, which can pressure near-term margins even if revenue keeps growing. Netflix frames this as timing, not deterioration.

In other words, Netflix does not say the business model breaks. It says it is leaning into growth and content, and it is asking investors to accept a bumpier profit path in exchange for a bigger long-term opportunity.

The bigger plot twist: Warner, buybacks, and the cash priority

The other reason the market focuses on guidance is the Warner Bros deal.

Netflix says it is working to close its acquisition of Warner Bros, and Reuters reports the company plans to pause share buybacks to accumulate cash to fund the pending acquisition. That is a meaningful capital allocation change. Buybacks can support earnings per share and signal confidence. Pausing them signals something else: cash becomes more valuable than short-term share count reduction.

If you strip the headlines away, the logic is straightforward. A major acquisition is not just a content library. It is integration work, financing costs, and a different cadence of spending. Netflix even notes acquisition-related expenses in its margin outlook.

Investors should treat this as a new phase of the Netflix story. The past phase is “streaming wins, margins expand.” The next phase looks more like “streaming consolidates, content scale expands, and the margin path gets bumpier.”

Netflix still expects ad revenue to roughly double in 2026 versus 2025. Reuters reports Netflix’s Chief Financial Officer says advertising revenue could reach about 3 billion USD in 2026. That is the second engine Netflix wants: subscriptions plus advertising, earning more from the same viewer.

But building an ad business takes time. It needs measurement tools, formats, sales teams, and credibility with brands. In the short run, it can lift revenue and still pressure margins.

Risks: what could break the story

The first risk is integration and execution risk around Warner. Deals look clean on slides and messy in real life. Watch for changing timelines, rising one-off costs, or vague language about how quickly synergies arrive.

The second risk is content cost inflation. A larger library helps, but new hits still cost money. If spending rises faster than viewing value, margins can disappoint even with revenue growth.

The third risk is advertising cyclicality. If the ad market weakens, Netflix can still grow audiences but monetise them less effectively. Early warning signs often show up as softer ad pricing, slower ad growth, or a shift toward more cautious wording.

Investor playbook: a simple post-earnings checklist

  • If Netflix keeps emphasising average revenue per user (ARPU), treat it as a signal the focus stays on monetisation quality.

  • If ad growth comes with specific indicators, track whether it gradually supports margins, not just revenue.

  • If Warner updates move from “intent” to clear integration milestones, expect the market to reward clarity more than ambition.

  • If churn rises after pricing changes, treat that as the earliest stress test of pricing power.

The queue is nice, the basket pays the bills

Netflix still knows how to pull a crowd. Q4 proves the core machine works: revenue grows, profit rises, cash flow holds up, and memberships clear 325 million.

But the market does not clap for what already happened. It prices what happens next. Netflix chooses to spend more, build faster, and pursue Warner, even if that nudges near-term profitability below what analysts pencilled in. In a way, this is the same Netflix decision investors have seen before, just with a bigger receipt.

For long-term investors, the point is not whether one quarter beats consensus. The point is whether the business keeps raising value per viewer, without losing trust. The queue outside is flattering. The basket at the checkout is what compounds.







This material is marketing content and should not be regarded as investment advice. Trading financial instruments carries risks and historic performance is not a guarantee of future results.

The instrument(s) referenced in this content may be issued by a partner, from whom Saxo receives promotional fees, payment or retrocessions. While Saxo may receive compensation from these partnerships, all content is created with the aim of providing clients with valuable information and options.

Outrageous Predictions 2026

01 /

  • Obesity drugs for everyone – even for pets

    Outrageous Predictions

    Obesity drugs for everyone – even for pets

    Jacob Falkencrone

    Global Head of Investment Strategy

    The availability of GLP-1 drugs in pill form makes them ubiquitous, shrinking waistlines, even for p...
  • Dumb AI triggers trillion-dollar clean-up

    Outrageous Predictions

    Dumb AI triggers trillion-dollar clean-up

    Jacob Falkencrone

    Global Head of Investment Strategy

    Agentic AI systems are deployed across all sectors, and after a solid start, mistakes trigger a tril...
  • Executive Summary: Outrageous Predictions 2026

    Outrageous Predictions

    Executive Summary: Outrageous Predictions 2026

    Saxo Group

    Read Saxo's Outrageous Predictions for 2026, our latest batch of low probability, but high impact ev...
  • Britain’s Great EU Backdoor Return

    Outrageous Predictions

    Britain’s Great EU Backdoor Return

    Neil Wilson

    Investor Content Strategist

    Faced with rolling fiscal, economic, trade and political crises the UK government sneaks back into t...
  • Dollar dominance challenged by Beijing’s golden yuan

    Outrageous Predictions

    Dollar dominance challenged by Beijing’s golden yuan

    Charu Chanana

    Chief Investment Strategist

    Beijing does an end-run around the US dollar, setting up a framework for settling trade in a neutral...
  • SpaceX announces an IPO, supercharging extraterrestrial markets

    Outrageous Predictions

    SpaceX announces an IPO, supercharging extraterrestrial markets

    John J. Hardy

    Global Head of Macro Strategy

    Financial markets go into orbit, to the moon and beyond as SpaceX expands rocket launches by orders-...
  • Taylor Swift-Kelce wedding spikes global growth

    Outrageous Predictions

    Taylor Swift-Kelce wedding spikes global growth

    John J. Hardy

    Global Head of Macro Strategy

    Next year’s most anticipated wedding inspires Gen Z to drop the doomscrolling and dial up the real w...
  • Quantum leap Q-Day arrives early, crashing crypto and destabilizing world finance

    Outrageous Predictions

    Quantum leap Q-Day arrives early, crashing crypto and destabilizing world finance

    Neil Wilson

    Investor Content Strategist

    A quantum computer cracks today’s digital security, bringing enough chaos with it that Bitcoin crash...
  • A Fortune 500 company names an AI model as CEO

    Outrageous Predictions

    A Fortune 500 company names an AI model as CEO

    Charu Chanana

    Chief Investment Strategist

    Can AI be trusted to take over in the boardroom? With the right algorithms and balanced human oversi...
  • Despite concerns, U.S. 2026 mid-term elections proceed smoothly

    Outrageous Predictions

    Despite concerns, U.S. 2026 mid-term elections proceed smoothly

    John J. Hardy

    Global Head of Macro Strategy

    In spite of outstanding threats to the American democratic process, the US midterms come and go cord...

This content is marketing material. 

None of the information provided on this website constitutes an offer, solicitation, or endorsement to buy or sell any financial instrument, nor is it financial, investment, or trading advice. Saxo Capital Market Ltd. (SCML) provides execution-only services, with all trades and investments based on self-directed decisions. Analysis, research, and educational content is for informational purposes only and should not be considered advice or a recommendation.

SCML content may reflect the personal views of the author, which are subject to change without notice. Mentions of specific financial products are for illustrative purposes only and may serve to clarify financial literacy topics. Content classified as investment research is marketing material and does not meet legal requirements for independent research.

SCML partners with companies that provide compensation for promotional activities conducted on its platform. Some partners also pay retrocessions contingent on clients investing in products from those partners. 

While SCML receives compensation from these partnerships, all educational and research content remains focused on providing information to clients.

Before making any investment decisions, you should assess your own financial situation, needs, and objectives, and consider seeking independent professional advice. SCML does not guarantee the accuracy or completeness of any information provided and assumes no liability for any errors, omissions, losses, or damages resulting from the use of this information.

Please refer to our full disclaimer and notification on non-independent investment research for more details.

Saxo
40 Bank Street, 26th floor
E14 5DA
London
United Kingdom

Contact Saxo

United Kingdom
United Kingdom

Trade Responsibly
All trading carries risk. To help you understand the risks involved we have put together a series of Key Information Documents (KIDs) highlighting the risks and rewards related to each product. Read more
Additional Key Information Documents are available in our trading platform.

Saxo is a registered Trading Name of Saxo Capital Markets UK Ltd (‘Saxo’). Saxo is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority, Firm Reference Number 551422. Registered address: 26th Floor, 40 Bank Street, Canary Wharf, London E14 5DA. Company number 7413871. Registered in England & Wales.

This website, including the information and materials contained in it, are not directed at, or intended for distribution to or use by, any person or entity who is a citizen or resident of or located in the United States, Belgium or any other jurisdiction where such distribution, publication, availability or use would be contrary to applicable law or regulation.

It is important that you understand that with investments, your capital is at risk. Past performance is not a guide to future performance. It is your responsibility to ensure that you make an informed decision about whether or not to invest with us. If you are still unsure if investing is right for you, please seek independent advice. Saxo assumes no liability for any loss sustained from trading in accordance with a recommendation.

Apple, iPad and iPhone are trademarks of Apple Inc., registered in the U.S. and other countries. App Store is a service mark of Apple Inc. Android is a trademark of Google Inc.

©   since 1992