New York, July 10, 2026, 08:30 EDT
Netflix NASDAQ:NFLX rose 0.2% in Friday’s premarket after a report said the company is looking at always-on live channels and service bundles to offset sluggish viewer engagement. The move comes with Nasdaq 100 futures down 0.3% and Netflix’s Q2 earnings due in six days.
Timing is key here. Netflix finished Thursday at $75.47, just 6.5% over its 52-week low and down 40.9% from its 52-week high. Engagement — meaning how much and how often people watch — is tied to both keeping members and selling ads, so it’s both a financial and a product metric.
Cash yield gets less attention. Based on Thursday’s market cap of about $324.4 billion, Netflix is projecting $12.5 billion in free cash flow in 2026. That comes out to a yield near 3.9%. Free-cash-flow yield here is annual cash after capital spending, divided by the company’s market value.
| Cash-flow bridge | Amount | Share of market value |
|---|---|---|
| Market cap | $324.4 billion | — |
| Free cash flow estimate for 2026 | $12.5 billion | 3.9% |
| Old forecast, before break-fee impact | $11.0 billion | 3.4% |
| Buyback left as of March 31 | $6.8 billion | 2.1% |
The 3.4% number isn’t a fresh forecast. It just reflects Netflix’s previous guidance, stripped of the one-off $2.8 billion after-tax boost from the Warner Bros. Discovery NASDAQ:WBD termination fee. Netflix said the higher cash forecast was mostly thanks to that payment. That’s why the lower share price doesn’t suddenly mean Netflix is a cash-yield play.
Netflix is pointing to second-quarter revenue of $12.574 billion, matching the $12.58 billion consensus from Wall Street. The company put its operating margin guidance at 32.6%, which is down from 34.1% a year ago. Analysts’ earnings estimate has dropped about 6% over the past three months.
| Second-quarter measure | Netflix forecast | Wall Street estimate | Reference point |
|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue | $12.574 billion | $12.580 billion | Up 13.5% from last year |
| Earnings per share | $0.78 | $0.79 | Was $0.84 expected three months back |
| Operating margin | 32.6% | — | 34.1% in Q2 2025 |
Benchmark’s Daniel L. Kurnos kept his Hold call Thursday, citing third-party data showing engagement slid after price hikes. Bernstein stuck with Outperform but trimmed its price target to $100 from $110. Citigroup NYSE:C kept Buy, still aiming for $100. But the average analyst target is $115 — about 52% above where shares finished Thursday. That gap faces a test with numbers due next week.
The reported plan would bring Netflix closer to the kind of distributors it once aimed to beat. Amazon.com NASDAQ:AMZN already lets users add paid third-party channels to Prime Video, while Walt Disney NYSE:DIS is pushing Hulu, Disney+ and live shows into a single service. Alphabet’s NASDAQ:GOOGL YouTube had a 13.4% share of U.S. TV watch time in April, according to Nielsen, with all streaming at 47.6%.
Netflix will start carrying a French broadcaster’s live channels inside its app this summer. Co-CEO Greg Peters said the deal should give people “more reasons to come to Netflix every day.” Netflix is expecting its ad revenue to about double to $3 billion this year. Longer live viewing could mean more ad slots. No financial terms were given for the live channel and bundle plans. The Verge
But the plan is a double-edged sword. Bundles could slow down cancellations. But they might also mean higher licensing bills, more revenue-sharing, and a busier app. If viewership numbers fall short or margins slip again, the earlier 3.4% cash yield won’t give much cover. Netflix still trades at about 23.8 times trailing earnings, while Disney is at 15.4 times.
The first test is set for July 16. Investors want to see if live shows, ad changes, and new products are actually boosting viewing, not just adding features. They’re also watching to see if Netflix keeps its 12%-14% full-year revenue growth outlook and 31.5% operating margin goal. Premarket trading suggests some bet the live-TV move will pay off. The cash numbers say it needs to.