Netflix sells off on guidance while quietly becoming a cash‑flow machine

Netflix’s Q1 2026 was the kind of print that would normally light a fire under most stocks: revenue grew about 16% year‑on‑year to 12.25 billion dollars, operating margin stayed north of 30% and EPS nearly doubled versus last year. The company also generated roughly 5.1 billion dollars of free cash flow in the quarter including a 2.8 billion dollar breakup fee — and even stripping that out, underlying FCF was around 2.25 billion, an 18–19% margin that’s higher than many mega‑cap tech names manage.

Yet the share price dropped roughly 9% after the earnings release as investors zeroed in on one line: management’s reaffirmed full‑year outlook for 2026, which points to revenue growth slowing from the current ~16% pace toward 12–14% with an operating‑margin target of about 31.5%. For a market still conditioned to trade Netflix on “top‑line acceleration”, that guidance looked like a classic peak‑growth signal.

Top points of analysis

  1. Q1 2026: revenue +16% YoY, EPS and earnings above estimates,…

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