Netflix (NFLX) dropped 9.7% after its Q1 2026 earnings report on April 16, despite posting better-than-expected top-line results.
What actually happened: Q1 2026 revenue came in at $12.25B — beating the $12.18B consensus — while operating margin hit 32.3% and free cash flow surged 91% YoY to $5.09B. Subscriber count topped 325 million globally. On the surface, a solid quarter.
Why the selloff: The market focused on Q2 guidance: revenue of $12.57B versus consensus $12.64B, and EPS guidance of $0.78 versus consensus $0.84 (-7.3% miss). The same day, Netflix announced that co-founder Reed Hastings would step down from the board at the June annual meeting — ending 29 years of involvement with the company.
What caused the Q2 guidance miss: The primary culprit is a concentration of advertising infrastructure costs in Q2. Netflix is targeting ~$3B in ad revenue for 2026 (roughly double 2025), with its ad-supported tier reaching 190M monthly active users. The cost spike looks seasonal, not structural.
Is Hastings leaving a risk? Not meaningfully. He stepped back from co-CEO in January 2023; Ted Sarandos and Greg Peters have run Netflix since then through a period of significant margin expansion (20s to 30s%). No analyst read the departure as a leadership vacuum.
Analyst consensus: Morgan Stanley ($115 OW), JPMorgan ($118 OW), and Goldman Sachs ($120 Buy) all maintained bullish ratings. Stock at $97.31 is 27.5% off its 52-week high of $134.12, offering 10-23% upside to target prices.
Our view: Neutral base case (50%). Watch April 30 FOMC — if the Fed signals rate cuts remain on the table, growth stocks like NFLX tend to recover quickly. A Q3 guidance miss would shift the thesis bearish.
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