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EUROS The World Financial Report
Nº 5 Thursday, 16 July 2026 · World Edition
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Netflix faces pivotal Q2 earnings after $257 billion wipeout

EUROS Newsroom · 31m ago · 2 min read · 🇮🇳 India
Netflix faces pivotal Q2 earnings after $257 billion wipeout

Netflix is set to report second-quarter earnings after a 45% stock plunge erased $257 billion in value, testing whether a drastically cheaper valuation can offset mounting concerns over subscriber engagement and fierce competition.

Netflix will release its second-quarter results after the closing bell today, with analysts forecasting revenue of $13 billion and earnings per share of 79 cents. The stock edged up 0.44% to $74.00 on Thursday afternoon, but the underlying investor mood remains highly cautious. Market participants are looking far beyond the headline revenue and profit growth to assess whether the streaming giant can reverse a damaging narrative.

The company's shares have dropped immediately following each of the last four quarterly earnings releases. Since notching an all-time high on June 30, 2025, the stock has plummeted 45%, erasing roughly $257 billion in market capitalization. This staggering loss makes Netflix one of the S&P 500's 20 worst-performing components over that period. The current rout deepened in mid-April when the company issued weak guidance alongside the news that co-founder and Executive Chairman Reed Hastings would step down.

Such a severe correction has dramatically altered the stock's valuation profile. Netflix currently changes hands at roughly 20 times projected earnings over the next 12 months. That marks a sharp contraction from its 10-year average forward multiple of 51 and its April valuation of more than 30 times forward earnings. The company now trades at a slight discount to the broader S&P 500, a pricing dynamic not observed since 2022.

Despite this cheaper entry point, valuation alone has not been enough to stabilize the stock. The core concern revolves around user engagement and its direct impact on future revenue. M Science recently warned that Netflix could report its weakest quarterly global net subscriber additions since 2022. The platform has reportedly struggled to retain viewers for original series beyond their first seasons.

These internal engagement hurdles coincide with a more hostile competitive landscape. Meta Platforms is actively exploring new formats for an Instagram for TV platform, threatening to draw audiences away from traditional streamers. Meanwhile, a robust recovery in movie theatres has shifted consumer behavior. Cinema stocks like Cinemark Holdings, IMAX Corp. and AMC Entertainment Holdings have all comfortably outperformed Netflix year-to-date, driven by surprise box-office successes like "Backrooms" and "Obsessions."

To defend its market position, Netflix is testing structural changes to its service. Management has explored introducing live television channels and bundling third-party streaming subscriptions to create a stickier platform. On the merger and acquisition front, the company has been active but unsuccessful. Netflix exited the bidding war for Warner Bros. Discovery, lost out to Fox in the race to acquire Roku, and denied reports that it was evaluating a bid for Lionsgate.