NEW YORK, April 14, 2026, 07:12 EDT
Netflix’s April 16 earnings are drawing bullish commentary from the Street, with ads and pricing hikes in the spotlight. In just the past day, upbeat notes landed from Wedbush and Morgan Stanley, while Goldman Sachs recently moved to a buy, all eyes on whether the streamer can turn its ad ambitions into real revenue traction.
Timing is key here. Netflix stands out among the major names reporting this week, as investors look for signs that U.S. firms can still hit growth targets even with markets on edge and energy costs climbing amid the Iran conflict. With regular subscriber updates off the table since last year, the focus has shifted—revenue, profit margins and ad dollars are now under the microscope.
Back in January, Netflix guided for first-quarter revenue at $12.157 billion with diluted EPS of $0.76, maintaining its full-year revenue outlook in the $50.7 billion to $51.7 billion range. The company said ad revenue is on track to roughly double by 2026. For 2025, ad sales cleared $1.5 billion and paid memberships climbed above 325 million.
Goldman’s Eric Sheridan bumped Netflix to Buy from Neutral, raising the firm’s target to $120 and pointing to a “strong start” in 2026. He now sees “more positive risk/reward from current levels” after the company dropped its Warner Bros. bid, and describes Netflix’s outlook as a “standalone execution story” with potential for estimate upgrades. Investors.com Investing.com
Wedbush’s Alicia Reese echoed that sentiment. In her note, she pointed to Netflix’s ad business, saying it stands to keep benefiting as the company pursues new partnerships, hones its targeting, taps into AI, and boosts live content. Her estimate: ad revenue has room to at least double, reaching $3 billion this year.
Netflix hiked U.S. subscription prices on March 26—ad-supported now runs $8.99 per month, standard jumps to $19.99, while premium tops out at $26.99. Analysts at TD Cowen say this should bump average revenue per subscriber in the U.S. and Canada by 6% in 2026.
Executives have kept their messaging steady. CFO Spencer Neumann is projecting ad revenue of around $3 billion for 2026, while co-CEO Greg Peters mentioned Netflix is introducing interactive video ads and experimenting with tools that “mix and match creative elements to drive better business outcomes.” Elsewhere, co-CEO Ted Sarandos cited live events abroad and the company’s push into video podcasts as additional growth drivers. Reuters
The landscape has changed. When Netflix walked away from the Warner Bros. deal in February, it pocketed a $2.8 billion breakup fee and cleared up an overhang that had been dragging on its shares. HSBC analysts pointed out that the move lets Netflix get back to business, while its rivals are still tangled in merger logistics. Paramount, according to AJ Bell’s Dan Coatsworth, will need much more than Harry Potter if it wants to challenge Netflix, Disney, and Amazon in the streaming wars.
The outlook remains murky. Analysts at Monness Crespi Hardt and Rosenblatt, both holding neutral ratings, point to valuation concerns and growing pressure from YouTube, free ad-backed streamers, and social media. Deutsche Bank’s fresh $100 price target? Still under where shares have been trading lately. And stepping back to the broader earnings picture, Nick Giorgi, chief equity strategist at Alpine Macro, warns: if geopolitics start cutting into fundamentals, “all bets are off.” Investors.com Reuters
Should Netflix hit or surpass its first-quarter goals, particularly if ad revenue starts to matter in a real way alongside subscriptions, those bullish analyst calls start to make more sense. But a miss could sting—a stock up about 25% since late February doesn’t have a lot of slack left for disappointment.