Netflix (NFLX) is trading around $88.5, marking a steep drawdown of roughly 30% from its summer 2025 highs, as investors weigh an earnings reset against deal risk tied to a potential mega-acquisition of Warner Bros Discovery assets. With fourth-quarter results due January 20, 2026, the stock sits at an inflection point: recovery catalyst or prolonged uncertainty.
Earnings Focus Shifts to Margins and Monetization
The upcoming report is less about subscriber adds and more about profitability levers. Street expectations call for $11.97B in revenue (+16.7% YoY) and $0.55 EPS (+~28% YoY). The key swing factor is margins after a bruising Q3, when operating margin slipped to 28.2% following a $619M Brazilian tax settlement, missing management’s earlier target.

Investors will be watching whether margins stabilize within the 23.9%–29.3% guided range and if advertising momentum holds. Ad revenue is projected near $1.08B for the quarter, reinforcing management’s ambition to double ad sales in 2026.
The WBD Bidding War Overhang
NFLX’s weakness has tracked headlines around a proposed acquisition of WBD’s studio and streaming assets. Netflix’s reported $82.7B proposal (about $27.75/share) could pivot to an all-cash structure to simplify execution. Standing in the way is a richer, hostile bid led by Paramount Skydance, reportedly $108.7B ($30/share, all cash).
A Delaware court decision on January 15 declined to fast-track litigation aimed at blocking a Netflix-WBD tie-up, offering temporary legal breathing room. Still, the scale of financing required remains a concern for balance-sheet risk and execution complexity.
Price Action Signals Caution
Intraday trading shows persistent selling pressure into late sessions, with volume spikes accompanying breakdowns toward the $88 handle. Attempts to bounce have been shallow, suggesting traders are reducing exposure ahead of earnings clarity rather than positioning aggressively for a rebound.
Related Information
What Bulls and Bears Are Saying
Despite the slide, consensus remains constructive: analysts cluster around a Moderate Buy with an average target near $127, implying 40%+ upside if margins normalize and content drives engagement. Optimists cite a packed slate—including marquee franchise finales and live sports, as potential upside surprises.
Skeptics counter that acquisition debt and integration risk could cap multiples for longer, even if operating trends improve.
Bottom line: Netflix heads into earnings compressed by deal uncertainty and margin scrutiny. A clean print with improving profitability, or decisive clarity on the WBD path, could reset sentiment. Until then, volatility is likely to stay elevated around the $88–$90 zone.

