Netflix closed Thursday near $91, continuing a rough March as investors weigh slowing growth against a still-elevated valuation. The stock is now down roughly 17% over the past four weeks and about 30% from its October highs.
Netflix, Inc., NFLX
The sell-off is not tied to one single event. Instead, it reflects a broader reassessment of how much investors are willing to pay for Netflix’s growth story right now.
Netflix is trading at a forward price-to-earnings multiple in the low 70s. That’s a number that demands near-perfect execution across advertising, live events, and franchise content.
The company posted Q4 2025 revenue of $12.05 billion and free cash flow of $9.5 billion — solid numbers by any measure. But management flagged a 10% rise in content spending for 2026, plus $275 million in costs tied to its now-abandoned bid for Warner Bros. Discovery.
That deal, a proposed $83 billion cash offer, was walked back in late February. The reversal triggered a brief relief rally, but Thursday’s weakness suggests the market is still processing what the standalone strategy looks like.
Paid net additions came in at just 2.68 million — a 46% year-on-year drop. That number has sharpened the debate about how far ad-tier growth and pricing can carry the stock from here.
While the stock dipped, co-CEO Ted Sarandos was in Brussels making the case for simpler streaming rules under the EU’s Audiovisual Media Services Directive.
His message to European regulators: don’t create a “patchwork of national mandates” that makes it impossible to plan production. He also called out YouTube, saying Europe has been treating it like a minor player rather than a genuine streaming competitor.
The trip didn’t move markets positively. Netflix slipped further in the final minutes of Tuesday’s session as those comments made the rounds.
On a lighter note, Netflix is hosting the first BTS performance in three years. The K-Pop group will play at Gwanghwamun Square, drawing from their fifth album, ARIRANG, which releases the day before the show.
A documentary, BTS: The Return, follows one week later, covering the making of the album.
Despite the downturn, analysts aren’t walking away. Of 34 to 36 covering analysts, the majority rate Netflix a Buy or Strong Buy. Average 12-month price targets sit between $114 and $119, implying around 25% upside from current levels. Some targets stretch to $150; more cautious calls sit near $95.
The key technical level to watch is $87.50. Multiple analysts flagged this as the line in the sand — a break below it could accelerate the downside.
Netflix’s SMA-200 currently sits at $108.71, well above the current price, underscoring that the longer-term trend has not yet turned.
The post Netflix (NFLX) Stock Slips as Wall Street Weighs Spending Surge Against Slower Growth appeared first on CoinCentral.

