Netflix (NFLX) Stock Today: Post‑Split Price, Q3 2025 Earnings Shock, Analyst Targets and the Ad‑Tier Boom

Netflix (NFLX) Stock Today: Post‑Split Price, Q3 2025 Earnings Shock, Analyst Targets and the Ad‑Tier Boom

Date: November 30, 2025

As investors head into the final stretch of 2025, Netflix, Inc. (NASDAQ: NFLX) sits at the center of three big storylines: a fresh 10‑for‑1 stock split, a noisy third‑quarter earnings miss tied to a Brazil tax dispute, and a rapidly scaling advertising business that now reaches roughly 190 million viewers a month. [1]

At Friday’s close on November 28, Netflix shares finished at $107.58, within a 52‑week range of about $82 to $134 on a split‑adjusted basis. [2] That leaves the stock roughly 20% below its recent high, even after a big multi‑year rally.


Key takeaways for November 30, 2025

  • Post‑split price: NFLX trades around $108 after its 10‑for‑1 split, down from more than $1,100 pre‑split but with the same overall market value. [3]
  • Q3 2025 results: Revenue grew about 17% year over year to roughly $11.5 billion, but earnings missed estimates due largely to a $619 million Brazil tax charge, sending the stock lower in October. [4]
  • Advertising surge: Netflix’s ad‑supported tier now reaches around 190 million monthly active viewers, and about 45% of U.S. Netflix viewing happens on the ad tier. [5]
  • Password‑sharing crackdown still paying off: 2025 enforcement has helped push revenue up 17% year over year and convert millions of former “freeloaders” into paying households. [6]
  • Analyst sentiment: Wall Street’s overall stance remains “Moderate Buy” with an average 12‑month target around the mid‑$130s; Rosenblatt just trimmed its split‑adjusted target to $152 while keeping a Buy rating. [7]
  • M&A wildcard: Netflix is one of several bidders invited to improve offers for Warner Bros. Discovery by December 1, a potential deal that could reshape the streaming landscape. [8]

Below is a deeper dive into the main Netflix stock stories investors are parsing on November 30, 2025.


Where Netflix stock stands after the 10‑for‑1 split

Netflix’s Board approved a 10‑for‑1 forward stock split on October 30, 2025. The stated goal: move the share price into a range that’s more accessible, especially for employees using stock options. [9]

Key split mechanics:

  • Record date: November 10, 2025
  • Distribution: Nine additional shares for each one held, delivered after the close on November 14
  • Split‑adjusted trading: Began on November 17, 2025 [10]

On paper, the stock “crashed” about 90% — from the $1,100+ range to roughly $110 — but that move was purely arithmetic: investors suddenly owned ten times as many shares at one‑tenth the price. Several outlets have spent the past two weeks explaining that nothing fundamental was destroyed by this optical drop. [11]

After some initial volatility, NFLX closed November 28 at $107.58, near the middle of its post‑split range and about 20% below its 52‑week high around $134. [12]

On valuation, Netflix currently trades at roughly:

  • ~45× trailing earnings
  • Mid‑30s× forward earnings
  • Around 10× trailing sales [13]

Even after the split, this keeps Netflix firmly in “premium multiple” territory relative to traditional media peers.


Q3 2025: Strong growth, noisy earnings

The most recent earnings report, released October 21, is still casting a long shadow over the stock.

Revenue and earnings

For Q3 2025, Netflix reported:

  • Revenue: about $11.5–11.51 billion, up roughly 17% year over year and broadly in line with Wall Street expectations [14]
  • Earnings per share (EPS):$5.87, well below consensus estimates around $6.9–7.0, a negative surprise of roughly 15–16% [15]
  • Net income: about $2.5 billion, still up around 8% year on year [16]
  • Free cash flow: roughly $2.66 billion in the quarter [17]

The earnings miss largely came down to a single line item: an unexpected $619 million tax expense tied to a long‑running dispute with Brazilian tax authorities over a transactions tax. [18]

Without that charge, Netflix’s operating margin would have exceeded its own forecast, and several analysts pointed out that the underlying business still looks very healthy. [19]

Market reaction

Despite record revenue, the Brazil surprise snapped a streak of earnings beats and rattled investors:

  • Netflix shares fell roughly 6–10% in the immediate aftermath of the report, dragging on major equity indices. [20]

By late November, the stock has recovered part of those losses, but remains below its pre‑earnings peak.


Ad‑supported tier: 190 million viewers and counting

If there’s one structural change investors are focused on right now, it’s Netflix’s pivot from pure subscriptions to a hybrid subscription + advertising model.

New ad metric and massive reach

On November 5, Netflix introduced a new advertising metric: Monthly Active Viewers (MAVs). Instead of counting just accounts, the company multiplies households by an estimated number of viewers per account to capture how many actual people see ads. [21]

Under that definition, Netflix says its ads reached around 190 million monthly active viewers worldwide in October. [22]

That figure builds on earlier disclosures that the ad‑supported tier had about 94 million monthly active users as of May, indicating rapid growth over the course of 2025. [23]

Ad tier now nearly half of U.S. viewing

Comscore’s 2025 State of Streaming report estimates that:

  • 45% of Netflix U.S. households now watch through the ad‑supported plan, up from 34% in 2024. [24]
  • Around 45% of U.S. viewing hours on Netflix are happening on the ad tier. [25]

Netflix’s management and several third‑party analyses say the company is on track to more than double ad revenue in 2025. [26]

For investors, this matters because:

  • Ads diversify revenue away from pure subscription price hikes
  • High‑engagement inventory (Netflix claims strong 18‑34 reach) can command premium ad pricing [27]

Password‑sharing crackdown: from outrage to revenue engine

What started as a widely mocked crackdown on password sharing has quietly become one of Netflix’s biggest profit levers.

A recent breakdown of the 2025 enforcement campaign estimates that the crackdown helped boost revenue 17% year over year to $11.51 billion, with many new paying accounts landing on lower‑priced ad‑supported plans. [28]

Other research suggests Netflix has:

  • Converted tens of millions of former moochers into paying customers
  • Turned an estimated 100 million “freeloading” households into a pool that has already yielded roughly 50 million new subscribers since mid‑2023 [29]

While analysts warn that the one‑time boost from password enforcement will eventually fade, 2025 data shows the strategy is still contributing meaningfully to growth — especially when paired with the ad tier, which gives price‑sensitive users a cheaper on‑ramp. [30]


Analyst sentiment on NFLX: “Buy”, but not cheap

Despite October’s earnings wobble and November’s volatility around the stock split, Wall Street remains broadly constructive on Netflix.

Consensus view

  • MarketBeat data covering 40–50 analysts shows a “Moderate Buy” consensus, with the majority rating Netflix Buy or Strong Buy, a smaller cluster at Hold, and only a token Sell or two. [31]
  • MarketWatch lists an average price target near $136–137 on a split‑adjusted basis. [32]

From Friday’s close around $108, that implies roughly 25–30% upside over the next 12 months if the average target proves accurate.

Rosenblatt and other recent moves

The most talked‑about analyst move this week came from Rosenblatt Securities:

  • It trimmed its target to $152 from $153, entirely to reflect the completed 10‑for‑1 split and updated modeling tweaks.
  • The firm reiterated a Buy rating, arguing Netflix can justify a mid‑40s earnings multiple given a roughly high‑20s EPS growth outlook. [33]

That $152 target implies about 40% upside versus the latest close.

On the cautious side, other analysts — such as JPMorgan, which recently cut its target to $124 and maintained a neutral stance — have flagged rising competition, potential engagement fatigue, and uncertainty around big acquisitions. [34]

Valuation debate

Recent analysis from both bullish and skeptical camps converges on one point: Netflix is not cheap.

  • Trailing P/E near mid‑40s; forward P/E in the mid‑30s
  • Price‑to‑sales ratio above 10×, far higher than the traditional media median near 1× [35]

Optimists argue that mid‑teens revenue growth, an expanding operating margin (management still targets about 28% for full‑year 2025) and a growing ad business justify the premium. [36]

Skeptics counter that any stumble — whether from weaker content, slower ad monetization, regulatory surprises like Brazil, or an expensive acquisition — could compress the multiple quickly.


Netflix’s guidance: growth, margins, and $9 billion in free cash flow

In commentary now being re‑quoted widely in late‑November analysis, Netflix’s management laid out an ambitious outlook:

  • Q4 2025 revenue growth: Expected to come in around 17% year over year
  • Full‑year 2025 operating margin: Guided to roughly 28%, up from 27% in 2024 despite the Brazil tax hit
  • Full‑year free cash flow: Target of about $9 billion for 2025 [37]

If Netflix hits those numbers, it will have successfully:

  • Shifted its story from “subscriber growth at all costs” to high‑margin cash generation
  • Proven that password enforcement and price increases did not kill demand
  • Built a fast‑growing advertising flywheel on top of its subscription base

Those are exactly the dynamics underpinning bullish calls that NFLX can keep compounding earnings and justify today’s valuation.


M&A wildcard: Netflix in the Warner Bros. Discovery bidding

The latest strategic twist isn’t in Netflix’s own filings, but in the wider media consolidation saga.

According to Reuters, Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD) has asked potential buyers — including Netflix, Comcast, and Paramount Skydance — to submit improved bids by December 1, 2025, after receiving preliminary offers. [38]

Reports in Barron’s and elsewhere suggest a potential Netflix–WBD combination would:

  • Add HBO, CNN and Warner Bros. studios to Netflix’s orbit
  • Deepen the film and TV library
  • Raise complex questions about debt, integration, and regulatory scrutiny [39]

It’s far from clear whether Netflix will actually pursue or win such a deal. Rosenblatt, for example, explicitly does not bake a successful WBD acquisition into its bull case and treats it as a risk factor rather than a core thesis. [40]

For now, the mere possibility of a large transaction is part of why some analysts are cautious: a big acquisition could dilute Netflix’s high‑margin, asset‑light model with legacy networks and debt‑heavy balance sheets.


What Netflix investors are watching next

As of November 30, 2025, the Netflix stock story is balancing between strong fundamentals and demanding expectations. Key catalysts over the coming months include:

  • Q4 2025 results – Confirmation (or not) of ~17% revenue growth, margin expansion, and $9 billion in free cash flow. [41]
  • Ad‑tier monetization – Updates on CPMs (ad pricing), fill rates, and whether 190 million monthly viewers translate into meaningful profit, not just reach. [42]
  • Password‑sharing endgame – Evidence on whether new paid accounts remain sticky once the dust settles. [43]
  • Any Warner Bros. Discovery outcome – Whether Netflix walks away, loses, or wins a deal that could reshape its risk profile. [44]

For now, Netflix remains a high‑quality, high‑expectation growth stock: investors are paying up for a business that blends global scale, a powerful content brand, and accelerating advertising economics — but that also leaves little room for error.

Is Netflix Stock About to Explode After Its Split? | $NFLX Analysis

References

1. ir.netflix.net, 2. www.investing.com, 3. ir.netflix.net, 4. www.businessinsider.com, 5. www.reuters.com, 6. www.ainvest.com, 7. www.marketbeat.com, 8. www.reuters.com, 9. ir.netflix.net, 10. ir.netflix.net, 11. www.indmoney.com, 12. www.investing.com, 13. finance.yahoo.com, 14. www.businessinsider.com, 15. www.investing.com, 16. www.ft.com, 17. finance.yahoo.com, 18. www.businessinsider.com, 19. www.investing.com, 20. www.reuters.com, 21. www.reuters.com, 22. www.reuters.com, 23. deadline.com, 24. www.comscore.com, 25. www.thekeyword.co, 26. www.reuters.com, 27. about.netflix.com, 28. www.ainvest.com, 29. www.justanotherpm.com, 30. www.businessinsider.com, 31. www.marketbeat.com, 32. www.marketwatch.com, 33. www.investing.com, 34. www.investors.com, 35. finance.yahoo.com, 36. www.nasdaq.com, 37. www.nasdaq.com, 38. www.reuters.com, 39. www.barrons.com, 40. www.tipranks.com, 41. www.nasdaq.com, 42. www.reuters.com, 43. www.ainvest.com, 44. www.reuters.com

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