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Netflix Q1 2026 Earnings Analysis

Netflix Q1 2026 Earnings Analysis

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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

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