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Netflix Shares Fall 8% Following Profit Beat, Transition to Yearly Viewership Data

Published Jul 16, 2026
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Summary:
  • Netflix reported Q2 earnings per share of $0.80, topping estimates of $0.79, but revenue of $12.56 billion narrowly missed expectations.
  • Netflix shares dropped over 8% in extended trading after the earnings announcement.
  • The company will stop publishing quarterly viewership data and switch to an annual "What We Watched" report starting in 2027.

Strong Results, but a Sour After-Hours Reaction

Net income was $3.40 billion, up from $3.13 billion in the same period last year.

The company narrowed its full-year 2026 revenue forecast to a range of $51 billion to $51.4 billion, from earlier guidance of $50.7 billion to $51.7 billion. Netflix anticipates its third-quarter revenue will increase by 12% and described its 2026 outlook as in line with previous projections.

Earlier this year, Netflix increased subscription prices across all tiers. The company stated that these price increases performed as expected relative to prior adjustments.

The earnings report arrives amid fierce competition in the streaming landscape, where rivals such as Disney+, Amazon Prime Video, and Warner Bros. Discovery are all fighting for subscriber attention. Netflix has been leaning into live programming and an ad-supported tier to diversify its revenue streams while maintaining its lead in total viewing hours.

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Live Events Are Tiny in Viewing, Huge for Sign-Ups

Over the last five years, six of the top ten days for new member registrations were driven by live events. While live content makes up over 5% of Netflix's content spending, it accounts for only about 1% of all viewing hours. The company pointed out that it only began offering live content in 2023.

Advertising remains central to the business. Netflix reiterated its expectation to roughly double annual ad revenue to $3 billion year over year. The company also noted that it is in "advanced stages" of negotiations with U.S. advertisers during the Upfront process, with deals expected to close soon. Advertisers have shown strong interest in live sports, such as the Women's World Cup, more NFL games, MLB contests, and WWE programming.

In Thursday's shareholder letter, Netflix remarked that the "entertainment industry remains dynamic and competitive."

As Netflix transitions to annual engagement reporting, it underscores the company's prioritization of financial metrics over viewership data, a move that reflects the streaming industry's maturation. With rivals like Disney+ and Amazon Prime Video also vying for market share, Netflix's focus on ad revenue growth - targeting $3 billion annually - and live event programming positions it to sustain its leadership. However, the shift also raises questions about transparency for investors who relied on quarterly viewership trends to gauge subscriber engagement.

Fewer Data Dumps, More Focus on the Financials

In the first half of 2026, members consumed over 97 billion hours of total content. The company explained in its shareholder letter: "The goal of separating the publication of the report from our earnings results is to keep the focus on our primary financial metrics - revenue and operating profit."

Netflix also stated that its acquisition strategy has not changed. It will "prioritize reinvestment in the business, both organically and through selective M&A, while maintaining a health balance sheet and ample liquidity."

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