WARSAW, July 16, 2026, 15:58 CEST
- Netflix stock slipped 0.3% to $73.49 in early trading on the Nasdaq.
- Early 2026 ad projections are $300 million higher than what management was targeting.
- The gap is about 66 basis points on expected annual revenue growth.
Netflix (NASDAQ: NFLX) fell 0.3% to $73.49 Thursday morning. The U.S. cash session was open. Results are set to be released after the close.
Advertising is the key metric for investors right now. CFO Spence Neumann said ads are expected to drive “about a 25% contributor to growth” this year.
Ads are still just a small piece. Netflix is aiming for about $3 billion from ads, while total revenue is seen between $50.7 billion and $51.7 billion.
Expectations are higher now. Early consensus from three sources sees 2026 ad revenue at $3.3 billion, which is 10% more than what management guided.
The $300 million shortfall isn’t small. That’s about 66 basis points of annual revenue growth on its own, without counting changes in pricing or memberships.
Latest benchmarks show that an in-line quarter might not be enough to end the debate.
| Measure | Netflix guide or target | Preliminary analyst view | Difference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Q2 total revenue | $12.574 billion | $12.59-$12.60 billion | Analyst view lines up with Netflix guide |
| Q2 advertising revenue | Not disclosed | $666-$705.8 million | Analysts have a 6% spread |
| Q2 operating margin | 32.6% | 33.0% | Analysts are 40 basis points above company |
| 2026 advertising revenue | About $3.0 billion | $3.3 billion | Analysts are 10% higher |
The numbers pull from company outlook plus two analyst datasets out now. Analyst figures are still early.
Company’s outlook puts Q2 operating income up 8.7%, behind the 13.5% revenue gain. Incremental operating margin runs near 22%. Not much cushion if ads miss.
Netflix is looking for its quickest pace of content-amortization growth of 2026 in the quarter. The company forecasts a 32.6% margin, coming down from 34.1% a year ago.
Ad visibility isn’t clear. One forecast puts Q2 ad sales at $705.8 million. Another calls for $666 million—that’s a 6% gap.
Netflix doesn’t list ad sales as a separate line in its core SEC revenue disclosure. So Wall Street leans on management’s latest run-rate comments.
“We had to lower our advertising forecast,” Ross Benes, an eMarketer analyst, told Reuters. Growth came in lower than what analysts were looking for earlier. Reuters
So investors want more than just a slight revenue beat. They’re looking for proof ad sales can top higher market expectations without hitting margins.
Risks could go either way. Stronger pricing or more members might help if ads lag. But weaker engagement, less ad demand or rising costs would make things tougher.
Shares are down over 20% this year. Revenue forecasts are close to what the company has guided, so investors are likely to focus on the ad outlook after results.