Beta Finch - Netflix - NFLX - EN

Netflix Q2 2026 Earnings Analysis

6 min · 17 jul 2026
aflevering Netflix Q2 2026 Earnings Analysis artwork

Beschrijving

More earnings analysis: https://betafinch.com [https://betafinch.com] Groups: FAANG (https://betafinch.com/groups/FAANG) [https://betafinch.com/groups/FAANG)] ────────── ALEX: Welcome to Beta Finch, your AI-powered earnings breakdown. Today we're digging into Netflix's Q2 2026 numbers, and there's a lot to unpack here. Before we dive in, quick disclaimer: this podcast is AI-generated content for educational and entertainment purposes only. Nothing we discuss should be considered investment advice. Always do your own research and consult a qualified financial advisor before making any investment decisions. JORDAN: Alright Alex, let's start with the topline. Revenue growth is guided at 12% for Q3, 11% FX-neutral, which is a slight deceleration from Q2's 12%. Some analysts flagged that. ALEX: Right, but CFO Spencer Neumann pretty much waved that off. His point was they don't manage quarter to quarter — they manage to the full year. And the full year guide is 13-14% top-line growth, roughly $6 billion in incremental revenue. JORDAN: And the context he gave was pretty staggering. They're calling themselves "still just getting started" — under 45% penetrated into their addressable 800 million households, and only capturing about 7% of a $670 billion addressable revenue market. That's a big runway claim. ALEX: It is. Let's talk engagement, because this was clearly the hot topic on the call — multiple analysts pushed on viewing hours softening. Co-CEO Greg Peters gave this whole framework: quality, variety, quantity, and made the point that not all hours are created equal. JORDAN: The live programming example was the standout for me. Live is about 5% of their content budget but only 1% of view hours — yet six of the top ten sign-up days in the last five years came from live events. Compare that to animation and kids' content, same 5% of spend, but 8% of view hours. Totally different jobs for the content to do. ALEX: And the actual number — view hours grew 2% in the first half of 2026, a slight acceleration from 1.5% last year. So the "engagement is dying" narrative doesn't really hold up in the data they're showing. JORDAN: Ted Sarandos also pushed back hard on the Season 2 drop-off question — said their second-season fall-off is actually slightly improved year over year, no change in release strategy needed. ALEX: Let's get into content spend, because that's where the checkbook talk gets interesting. Content expense is up about 10% this year — higher than their five-year average of 8%, but still below the 14% decade average. So spend is accelerating a bit, but they're framing it as disciplined, growing slower than revenue. JORDAN: And the slate highlights were fun — "I Will Find You" was their biggest original series launch this year, "Swapped" is tracking to be their second-biggest animated film ever behind K-Pop: Demon Hunters. Plus some great international examples — a Zimbabwean novel adapted into a South African hit called "The Polygamist," and "Rosario Tijeras" in Latin America getting a Season 6 greenlight. ALEX: That global content engine is really Netflix's moat at this point. Now, let's talk monetization — ads and pricing. Greg Peters said they manage the ads business for total revenue growth, and there's still a gap between ad-tier ARM and the standard-without-ads tier ARM. He's framing that gap as "under-realized revenue" — basically future growth already baked into the roadmap as they close it. JORDAN: On pricing, first-half price increases in the U.S., Mexico, and Spain are going "consistent with expectations" — no surprises there. And Peters made a value argument too — saying Netflix subscribers pay the least per hour of viewing compared to other SVOD services, with the ad tier at $8.99 in the U.S. being what he called an incredible entry point. ALEX: Let's touch on some of the newer bets — gaming and AI. Cloud gaming had a strong quarter: FIFA and Unhinged were their two most successful cloud game debuts, and monthly active players for cloud games are up 11x since O This episode includes AI-generated content.

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aflevering Netflix Q2 2026 Earnings Analysis artwork

Netflix Q2 2026 Earnings Analysis

More earnings analysis: https://betafinch.com [https://betafinch.com] Groups: FAANG (https://betafinch.com/groups/FAANG) [https://betafinch.com/groups/FAANG)] ────────── ALEX: Welcome to Beta Finch, your AI-powered earnings breakdown. Today we're digging into Netflix's Q2 2026 numbers, and there's a lot to unpack here. Before we dive in, quick disclaimer: this podcast is AI-generated content for educational and entertainment purposes only. Nothing we discuss should be considered investment advice. Always do your own research and consult a qualified financial advisor before making any investment decisions. JORDAN: Alright Alex, let's start with the topline. Revenue growth is guided at 12% for Q3, 11% FX-neutral, which is a slight deceleration from Q2's 12%. Some analysts flagged that. ALEX: Right, but CFO Spencer Neumann pretty much waved that off. His point was they don't manage quarter to quarter — they manage to the full year. And the full year guide is 13-14% top-line growth, roughly $6 billion in incremental revenue. JORDAN: And the context he gave was pretty staggering. They're calling themselves "still just getting started" — under 45% penetrated into their addressable 800 million households, and only capturing about 7% of a $670 billion addressable revenue market. That's a big runway claim. ALEX: It is. Let's talk engagement, because this was clearly the hot topic on the call — multiple analysts pushed on viewing hours softening. Co-CEO Greg Peters gave this whole framework: quality, variety, quantity, and made the point that not all hours are created equal. JORDAN: The live programming example was the standout for me. Live is about 5% of their content budget but only 1% of view hours — yet six of the top ten sign-up days in the last five years came from live events. Compare that to animation and kids' content, same 5% of spend, but 8% of view hours. Totally different jobs for the content to do. ALEX: And the actual number — view hours grew 2% in the first half of 2026, a slight acceleration from 1.5% last year. So the "engagement is dying" narrative doesn't really hold up in the data they're showing. JORDAN: Ted Sarandos also pushed back hard on the Season 2 drop-off question — said their second-season fall-off is actually slightly improved year over year, no change in release strategy needed. ALEX: Let's get into content spend, because that's where the checkbook talk gets interesting. Content expense is up about 10% this year — higher than their five-year average of 8%, but still below the 14% decade average. So spend is accelerating a bit, but they're framing it as disciplined, growing slower than revenue. JORDAN: And the slate highlights were fun — "I Will Find You" was their biggest original series launch this year, "Swapped" is tracking to be their second-biggest animated film ever behind K-Pop: Demon Hunters. Plus some great international examples — a Zimbabwean novel adapted into a South African hit called "The Polygamist," and "Rosario Tijeras" in Latin America getting a Season 6 greenlight. ALEX: That global content engine is really Netflix's moat at this point. Now, let's talk monetization — ads and pricing. Greg Peters said they manage the ads business for total revenue growth, and there's still a gap between ad-tier ARM and the standard-without-ads tier ARM. He's framing that gap as "under-realized revenue" — basically future growth already baked into the roadmap as they close it. JORDAN: On pricing, first-half price increases in the U.S., Mexico, and Spain are going "consistent with expectations" — no surprises there. And Peters made a value argument too — saying Netflix subscribers pay the least per hour of viewing compared to other SVOD services, with the ad tier at $8.99 in the U.S. being what he called an incredible entry point. ALEX: Let's touch on some of the newer bets — gaming and AI. Cloud gaming had a strong quarter: FIFA and Unhinged were their two most successful cloud game debuts, and monthly active players for cloud games are up 11x since O This episode includes AI-generated content.

17 jul 20266 min
aflevering Netflix Q1 2026 Earnings Analysis artwork

Netflix Q1 2026 Earnings Analysis

ALEX: Welcome to Beta Finch, your AI-powered earnings breakdown. I'm Alex, and joining me as always is Jordan. Today we're diving into Netflix's Q1 2026 earnings call, and wow, what a quarter this was for the streaming giant. Before we get into the numbers, I need to mention that this podcast is AI-generated content for educational and entertainment purposes only. Nothing we discuss should be considered investment advice. Always do your own research and consult a qualified financial advisor before making any investment decisions. Jordan, Netflix just reported some pretty impressive numbers here. Walk us through the key highlights. JORDAN: Absolutely, Alex. The headline numbers are strong. Netflix is maintaining their full-year 2026 guidance of 12% to 14% revenue growth with operating margins at 31.5%. They ended 2025 with more than 325 million paid subscribers, and here's the kicker - they're now entertaining nearly a billion people globally. That's incredible scale. ALEX: A billion people! That really puts their reach into perspective. But what caught my attention was their advertising business. They're projecting to roughly double it to about $3 billion this year. That's significant growth in what's becoming a crucial revenue stream for them. JORDAN: Exactly. And speaking of growth potential, CEO Gregory Peters shared some fascinating market penetration data. Netflix has captured only about 45% of addressable households with smart TVs and good data - that's out of roughly 800 million households. Even more striking, they estimate they account for just 5% of global TV viewing time. That suggests there's massive room for expansion. ALEX: Those are some pretty compelling growth runway numbers. But Jordan, I have to ask about the elephant in the room - the Warner Brothers deal that they walked away from. What happened there? JORDAN: This was one of the more interesting parts of the call, Alex. CEO Ted Sarandos was very candid about it. He emphasized from the start that the Warner Brothers acquisition was a "nice-to-have, not a need-to-have." When the cost grew beyond what they felt was the net value to shareholders, they walked away. Sarandos called it a test of their "investment discipline." ALEX: I respect that kind of discipline, especially in today's market where we've seen some questionable M&A activity. What did they learn from the experience? JORDAN: Sarandos said they learned they could execute deals of that size, built their "M&A muscle," and proved they could stay focused on their core business during the process. The key takeaway was that when emotion and ego were on one side and shareholder value was on the other, they chose shareholders. That's the kind of capital allocation discipline investors want to see. ALEX: Speaking of shareholder value, let's talk about what's driving engagement. They had some incredible success with live sports this quarter. JORDAN: The World Baseball Classic in Japan was a massive hit - literally the most-watched program Netflix has ever had in Japan, with 31.4 million global viewers. But here's what's really impressive: it drove Netflix's largest single sign-up day ever in Japan, and Japan led their Q1 member growth globally. ALEX: That's a perfect example of how live content can drive different types of value. It's not just about total viewing hours anymore, is it? JORDAN: Exactly. Gregory Peters made this point beautifully - they're developing more sophisticated engagement metrics beyond just view hours. They have a "primary quality metric" that hit an all-time high in Q1, and while they won't reveal the formula, they say it's predictive of key business metrics like retention. ALEX: Smart of them to keep that proprietary. Now, one area that fascinated me was their expansion into new content categories. They're really diversifying beyond traditional TV and movies. JORDAN: Yes! They're pushing into podcasts, regional live sports, and gaming. On podcasts, they're seeing incre This episode includes AI-generated content.

17 apr 20268 min
aflevering Netflix Q4 2025 Earnings Analysis artwork

Netflix Q4 2025 Earnings Analysis

# Beta Finch Podcast Script - Netflix Q4 2025 Earnings **ALEX**: Welcome to Beta Finch, your AI-powered earnings breakdown where we cut through the corporate speak to give you the real story behind the numbers. I'm Alex. **JORDAN**: And I'm Jordan. Before we dive in, this podcast is AI-generated content for educational and entertainment purposes only. Nothing we discuss should be considered investment advice. Always do your own research and consult a qualified financial advisor before making any investment decisions. **ALEX**: Today we're breaking down Netflix's Q4 2025 earnings, and wow - there's a lot to unpack here. Jordan, let me start with the headline numbers because they're pretty impressive. **JORDAN**: Absolutely, Alex. Netflix crushed it across the board. They delivered 16% revenue growth and - get this - 30% operating profit growth. They're guiding for 2026 revenue of $51 billion, which is 14% year-over-year growth. And their operating margins are expected to hit 31.5%, up two full percentage points. **ALEX**: What really caught my eye was the advertising business. They said ad sales grew two and a half times in 2025, and they're expecting it to roughly double again in 2026 to about $3 billion. Jordan, that's starting to become real money for Netflix. **JORDAN**: It really is. And here's what's interesting - they're still under 10% of TV time in all major markets and only about 7% of the addressable market for consumer and ad spend. So there's massive room for growth. But the elephant in the room here is obviously the Warner Bros. Studios and HBO acquisition they're working to close. **ALEX**: Right, and I have to say, listening to the call, the executives sounded genuinely excited about this deal. Gregory Peters mentioned they weren't even looking to be buyers initially, but when they got "under the hood" during due diligence, several things got them excited. The film studio brings a mature theatrical business, the TV studio expands their production capability, and HBO - well, it's HBO. **JORDAN**: What's smart about their positioning is they're framing this as an accelerant to their core strategy, not a pivot. Spencer Neumann noted that roughly 85% of the combined company's revenues post-close would still be from Netflix's core streaming business. They're not abandoning their model - they're enhancing it. **ALEX**: And Theodore Sarandos made a really compelling point about why they think this deal will get regulatory approval. He said it's "pro-consumer, pro-innovation, pro-worker, pro-creator, and pro-growth." His argument was that the TV landscape has never been more competitive - YouTube has full-length films and NFL games, Amazon owns MGM, Apple's competing for Oscars. The lines are blurring everywhere. **JORDAN**: That's a good point. But let's talk about something that might concern some investors - engagement growth was only up 2% year-over-year to about 1.5 billion additional hours. That's actually an acceleration from 1% growth they saw earlier, but it's still pretty modest for a growth company. **ALEX**: True, but Gregory Peters had an interesting take on this. He said viewing of their original branded content was actually up 9% in the second half versus 7% in the first half. The slower overall growth was because they had fewer licensed titles compared to when they bulked up during the strikes in 2023 and 2024. **JORDAN**: And they're getting more sophisticated about measuring engagement quality, not just quantity. Peters mentioned they achieved an all-time high on their primary quality metric in 2025, and customer satisfaction is also at an all-time high. Sometimes the numbers don't tell the whole story. **ALEX**: Speaking of content, Theodore Sarandos was in full showman mode describing their upcoming slate. We're talking about the return of huge franchises - Bridgerton season four, One Piece season two, the third season of The Night Agent, second season of Beef. Plus new projects from the This episode includes AI-generated content.

20 feb 20268 min