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Netflix Shares Dip as Markets Hit Highs; More Tests Ahead for Streaming Stock
31 May 2026
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Netflix Shares Dip as Markets Hit Highs; More Tests Ahead for Streaming Stock

NEW YORK, May 31, 2026, 16:04 (EDT)

Netflix shares slipped every session during the holiday-shortened week, starting June in the red as the broader U.S. market pushed to record highs.

Netflix ended Friday at $86.02, off 0.39% for the session and down about 2.9% from last week’s close of $88.60. Shares moved between $85.66 and $86.67 Friday, with volume at 39.8 million shares, based on market data.

That gap has become important with investors backing big tech and AI stocks, but Netflix faces a different test. The debate is whether price hikes, ads, and new content formats will push revenue higher after it dropped a major Warner Bros. agreement and co-founder Reed Hastings readies to leave the board.

U.S. markets stayed shut Monday for Memorial Day. Nasdaq trades Monday to Friday, 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Eastern. Markets were also closed over the weekend, so the next session lands Monday, setting up before Netflix’s annual shareholder meeting on June 4. Nasdaq

Wall Street finished at new highs Friday. The S&P 500 ended up 0.22%, the Nasdaq added 0.21%, and the Dow rose 0.72%. For the week, the Nasdaq advanced 2.39% and the S&P 500 was up 1.43%, Reuters said.

Netflix’s stock is still leaning heavily on its own forward guidance. The company told investors in its April letter that first-quarter revenue climbed 16% to $12.25 billion and it’s projecting 2026 revenue between $50.7 billion and $51.7 billion. The company said ad revenue is also on pace to hit $3 billion this year, about twice what it was last year.

Operating margin is on radar too, with Netflix targeting a 31.5% margin in 2026. The company expects second-quarter revenue to climb 13%. Content spend is set to peak in the first half.

Netflix handed investors another option in April, announcing a new $25 billion share buyback program. The company had just ended its pursuit of Warner Bros. and received a $2.8 billion break fee, according to Reuters. Buybacks allow the company to snap up its own stock, cutting the number of shares trading.

Analysts aren’t satisfied with that answer. Ross Benes at EMarketer said “advertising will play a bigger role,” and Morningstar’s Matthew Dolgin called revenue per user “the biggest key” to growth. Parth Talsania, CEO of Equisights Research, said without firmer guidance, there’s less visibility on a 2027 acceleration. Reuters

Disney slipped 1.83% and Comcast was down 1.15% on Friday, with Netflix off 0.39%. Media investors are left trying to gauge which firms still have room to protect streaming returns as pay TV erodes and content spending stays high. MarketWatch

But it’s a tricky setup. If ad revenue rises slower than forecast or if price hikes drive more users to cheaper options or away from Netflix, the company could have a hard time proving its ad tier is boosting revenue, not just shifting it around. A stronger U.S. jobs number could also send bond yields higher and hit growth stocks across the board next week, Wall Street strategists warned before the June 5 payrolls report.

Netflix’s shareholder meeting on June 4 gives execs a shot at settling nerves, but there won’t be new earnings. Hard data is still ahead. Right now, the stock missed gains in a record market. Management is still telling investors to wait for more help from ads, live shows, and pricing.

Iwona Majkowska is a financial markets journalist at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, artificial intelligence and technology. A graduate of the Warsaw School of Economics, she previously worked in equity research and financial analysis before focusing on market reporting. Her daily coverage helps investors follow major developments across U.S. and global markets.

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