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Netflix Stock (NFLX) After Hours Today (Dec. 15, 2025): Why Shares Slipped and What to Watch Before Tuesday’s Open
15 December 2025
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Netflix Stock (NFLX) After Hours Today (Dec. 15, 2025): Why Shares Slipped and What to Watch Before Tuesday’s Open

Netflix, Inc. (NASDAQ: NFLX) ended Monday’s session lower and traded little changed after the closing bell, with investors continuing to digest a fast-moving—and unusually high-stakes—media deal storyline that is reshaping how Wall Street is valuing the streaming giant.

Netflix stock after the bell: the numbers investors are watching

Netflix shares closed at $93.77 on Monday, down $1.42 (-1.49%) versus the prior close, and hovered around that level in after-hours trading.

For context on the day’s trading “map,” the session featured an intraday high near $96.37 and a low near $93.53, with volume around 39.1 million shares. Yahoo Finance

The broader tape wasn’t a major tailwind: U.S. stocks finished modestly lower, with the S&P 500 down 0.2%, the Dow off 0.1%, and the Nasdaq down 0.6% as traders looked ahead to a heavy slate of economic data.

The headline driver: Netflix doubles down on the Warner Bros. deal despite a hostile bid

The biggest “why” behind Netflix’s ongoing volatility is still the proposed acquisition of major Warner Bros. Discovery assets—now complicated by a competing hostile offer.

On Monday, Netflix co-CEOs Ted Sarandos and Greg Peters circulated a Q&A-style memo to employees (disclosed in an SEC filing) underscoring that the company’s strategy and posture on the transaction has not changed, even after Paramount Skydance’s hostile bid emerged.

What Netflix told employees (and what investors should take from it)

In the SEC-filed memo, Netflix leadership framed the next phase as “a complex process over the next year or so,” signaling a long runway where headlines, regulatory commentary, and deal documents can move the stock. SEC

Key investor-relevant points from the filing:

  • Regulatory confidence, backed by “view share” math: Netflix argued that, using Nielsen viewing-share data, a combination would move Netflix’s U.S. view share from 8% to 9%, still behind YouTube (13%) and behind a hypothetical Paramount/WBD combination (14%). SEC
  • Theatrical strategy: a notable shift in tone: Netflix said it is “fully committed” to maintaining Warner Bros.’ theatrical release model, emphasizing the studio’s legacy and business value. SEC+1
  • No “overlap,” no studio closures (per the memo’s framing): Netflix positioned the deal as additive rather than duplicative, emphasizing “no overlap or studio closures” in how it described the transaction internally. TheWrap

Reuters reported Monday that Netflix reiterated its position on the deal as unchanged, despite the competing hostile bid, and highlighted the company’s argument that the transaction is important to compete with YouTube at scale.

Deal math matters: equity value vs. enterprise value—and why Wall Street cares

Investors will see two big numbers referenced repeatedly, and they mean different things:

  • Reuters described the Netflix transaction as a $72 billion equity deal.
  • Other deal write-ups and analysis (including industry coverage and credit research) reference an enterprise value around $82.7 billion, which reflects debt and other balance-sheet considerations beyond equity alone.

Meanwhile, the rival hostile approach has been described by Reuters as $108.4 billion.

For NFLX shareholders, those figures translate into three near-term market questions that won’t go away before Tuesday’s open:

  1. Probability of completion (and the “regulatory discount” applied to NFLX)
  2. Cost of capital / financing (how much leverage, at what rates)
  3. Integration and business model changes (especially around theaters, bundling, and content spending)

Regulatory risk: the YouTube argument is under scrutiny

Netflix is explicitly leaning on the idea that YouTube is a dominant competitor in streaming viewership—but antitrust specialists are skeptical regulators will accept a simple “we compete with YouTube” framing.

In a Reuters analysis published December 12, antitrust attorneys argued the Justice Department is unlikely to view Netflix and YouTube as interchangeable because of differences in content type, audience, and business models (subscription-driven premium programming vs. ad-driven user-generated ecosystems).

Why this matters for Tuesday: when a deal becomes the market’s main narrative, even small headlines—an enforcement comment, a politician’s statement, a procedural update—can create premarket gaps.

Financing and balance-sheet watch: bridge loans and leverage become front-page issues

One reason Netflix stock can react sharply on deal headlines is that the financing footprint is large enough to influence how equity investors think about risk—especially in a market sensitive to rates.

In an SEC filing tied to the transaction, Netflix disclosed commitment parties agreeing to provide up to $59 billion of senior unsecured bridge term loans to finance the cash portion of the purchase price and related costs (subject to conditions).

CreditSights’ early deal reaction analysis (Dec. 5) laid out additional credit-market considerations investors continue to track, including a cash financing mix and leverage expectations, plus a meaningful “coin flip” view of regulatory outcome risk. CreditSights

Why it matters before Tuesday’s open: if Treasury yields move sharply on Tuesday morning’s economic data (more on that below), the market may translate that directly into “what does funding this deal cost now?”—even if the deal itself won’t close for months.

Today’s forecast snapshot: a notable analyst price-target cut

Beyond the deal narrative, Wall Street’s near-term “forecast” flow today included at least one prominent price-target move.

MarketBeat reported that Wolfe Research lowered its Netflix price target to $121 from $139, while reiterating an Outperform rating.

Even when ratings remain positive, cuts like this can reinforce the idea that the stock’s next leg isn’t only about Netflix’s operating performance—it’s also about deal odds and regulatory/financing uncertainty.

What to know before the stock market opens Tuesday (Dec. 16, 2025)

Tuesday’s premarket setup has two layers: (1) macro data that can swing the Nasdaq before the open, and (2) deal-related headlines that can hit at any hour.

1) Key economic reports hit before and shortly after the open

Because of schedule disruptions tied to the 2025 government services lapse, several major reports have been delayed and rescheduled—and Tuesday morning is a big one.

At 8:30 a.m. ET:

  • The Employment Situation report for November 2025 is scheduled (a major market mover).
  • The Advance Monthly Sales for Retail and Food Services (retail sales) releases at 8:30 a.m. (rescheduled for Dec. 16).

At 10:00 a.m. ET:

  • Manufacturing and Trade Inventories and Sales (business inventories) for September 2025 is scheduled for Dec. 16 at 10:00 a.m.

Why this matters for NFLX specifically: Netflix is a mega-cap growth stock where valuation sensitivity to rates still matters. Stronger-than-expected jobs/retail data can lift yields and pressure high-duration equities; weaker data can do the opposite—regardless of Netflix’s company-specific news flow.

2) Deal headlines that can move NFLX premarket

Before the opening bell, traders will be scanning for any incremental updates on:

  • Regulatory posture (FTC/DOJ signals, comment letters, or procedural steps)
  • Warner Bros. shareholder process and any public responses to the hostile bid narrative
  • Additional SEC filings related to merger communications (investor decks, transcripts, employee communications filed under Rule 425)

Given Netflix itself is telling staff this will be a complex process stretching over “the next year or so,” the market is likely to keep pricing in a wide distribution of outcomes day-to-day. SEC

One more context point: Netflix’s recent stock split can distort casual price comparisons

If you’re comparing today’s ~$94 share price to older levels, remember Netflix previously announced a 10-for-1 stock split, with split-adjusted trading beginning in mid-November.

That doesn’t change the company’s value by itself—but it does change how traders talk about “levels,” options strikes, and percentage moves.

Bottom line heading into Tuesday

Netflix stock is entering Tuesday’s session with two forces in play:

  • A macro catalyst window (jobs + retail sales) that can move the whole Nasdaq before the open, and
  • A company-specific catalyst (the Warner deal chess match) that’s driving perception of Netflix’s long-term strategy, regulatory risk, and financing needs—now reinforced by an SEC-filed employee memo and fresh reporting that Netflix’s stance hasn’t changed.

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