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Netflix Stock Surges 13.8% as Company Walks Away from Warner Bros

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Netflix Inc. (NASDAQ: NFLX) shares jumped 13.8% on February 27, 2026, closing at $96.24 after the streaming giant announced it would not raise its bid for Warner Bros. Discovery assets, allowing Paramount Skydance to prevail in a months-long bidding war. The decision, coupled with a breakup fee and preserved capital flexibility, fueled investor relief and optimism about disciplined growth.

Netflix Stock Surges 13.8% as Company Walks Away from Warner
Netflix Stock Surges 13.8% as Company Walks Away from Warner Bros

Netflix had been pursuing Warner Bros.’ studio and streaming assets in a proposed deal valued at around $83 billion earlier in negotiations. On February 26, the company formally declined to match Paramount Skydance’s superior offer, stating in a release that the higher price made the transaction “no longer financially attractive.” Co-CEOs Ted Sarandos and Greg Peters said, “We believe we would have been strong stewards of Warner Bros.’ iconic brands,” but emphasized capital discipline over overpaying.

The withdrawal triggered a significant stock rally, with shares opening sharply higher and trading up to $96.75 intraday before settling at $96.24 on volume exceeding 200 million shares — far above average. The move came amid a broader pullback earlier in 2026, with Netflix down 38% from its June 2025 peak of $134.12 and trading near $75 lows in recent weeks.

The decision frees Netflix from a potentially dilutive acquisition while securing a breakup fee — details of which were not disclosed but expected to provide a meaningful cash influx. Analysts viewed the exit positively, noting it avoids integration risks in a competitive streaming landscape and allows focus on core strengths: content investment, advertising growth and subscriber momentum.

Netflix’s most recent earnings, reported January 20, 2026, for the fourth quarter ended December 31, 2025, showed revenue of $12.05 billion, up 17.6% year over year and beating estimates of $11.97 billion. Earnings per share came in at $0.56, topping consensus of $0.55. The company crossed 325 million paid memberships, with global viewership approaching one billion people. Members watched 96 billion hours in the second half of 2025, up 2% year over year. Advertising revenue more than doubled from 2024, surpassing $1.5 billion for the full year.

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Operating income rose 30% to $2.96 billion in the quarter, expanding full-year 2025 margins to 29.5% from 26.7%. Netflix guided 2026 revenue between $50.7 billion and $51.7 billion (12% to 14% growth) and operating margins around 31.5%, including some acquisition-related costs — though the Warner deal’s collapse removes that pressure.

The company paused share buybacks to preserve cash during the bidding process, a move that drew mixed reactions but now positions Netflix for renewed capital returns or aggressive content spending. Advertising remains a bright spot, with projections for roughly doubling in 2026 to around $3 billion, diversifying beyond pure subscriptions.

Analysts upgraded or reiterated positive views post-announcement. Huber Research moved to “Strong Buy,” citing improved valuation and execution. Consensus targets hover around $115 to $130, implying significant upside from current levels. The stock’s forward P/E has compressed to the low 30s from mid-60s peaks, making it attractive for growth investors.

Challenges persist: competition from Disney+, Amazon Prime Video and others intensifies, content costs remain high, and password-sharing crackdowns — while boosting paid subs — risk churn in price-sensitive markets. Yet Netflix’s lead in originals, global reach and ad-tier momentum underpin long-term confidence.

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The Warner exit shifts focus back to organic growth. Upcoming catalysts include Q1 2026 earnings (expected mid-April), major releases like anticipated originals, and ad-tier expansion. Management has teased stronger programming slates and international pushes.

As of February 28, 2026, Netflix trades with a market cap exceeding $406 billion, a 52-week range of $75.01 to $134.12, and strong institutional ownership. The surge reflects market approval of strategic restraint, positioning the company to capitalize on streaming’s maturation without the burdens of a massive merger.

Investors will watch for confirmation of the breakup fee and any renewed buyback activity. With the deal drama resolved, Netflix appears poised for a rebound, betting on content, ads and execution to drive returns in 2026.

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Dhierin-Perkash Bechai is an aerospace, defense and airline analyst.
Dhierin runs the investing group The Aerospace Forum, whose goal is to discover investment opportunities in the aerospace, defense and airline industry. With a background in aerospace engineering, he provides analysis of a complex industry with significant growth prospects, and offers context to developments as they occur, describing how they might affect investment theses. His investing ideas are driven by data informed analysis. The investing group also provides direct access to data analytics monitors.
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