NFLX Reports July 16. The Stock Is Down 46% From Its High.

Netflix reports tomorrow after the close. Most of the conversation has been about the World Cup dragging engagement numbers lower. That’s real. It’s also probably the wrong thing to focus on.

Slight tangent, but it matters: The World Cup began June 11, so it only affected the final 20 days of Netflix’s second quarter. The knockout rounds and the final fall into Q3. That means the July 16 numbers give you a partial picture of the World Cup impact — and management’s forward commentary will matter far more than whatever the engagement line shows for Q2.

Netflix is slated to report Q2 2026 results on July 16. Consensus expects revenues of $12.57 billion, or 13.5% growth year over year, with an EPS of $0.79 per share. Management guided to a 32.6% operating margin for the quarter. Content amortization growth is expected to have peaked in Q2 — meaning costs should ease materially in the back half of 2026. If that holds, margins expand. That’s the bull setup in one sentence.

What the Options Market Is Pricing

Implied volatility on NFLX is sitting in the highest 10% of observations over the past year. Option markets are pricing a 50% probability of a move greater than 8.22% on earnings day. The mean one-day swing over recent reports has been around 6-7%. So the market is paying up for this one — implying that positioning is more uncertain than usual going in.

That uncertainty makes sense. Netflix has beaten the consensus EPS estimate twice in the trailing four quarters and missed twice, with an average negative surprise of 4.79%. This is not a reliable beat machine right now. The stock has already discounted a lot of bad news — shares are down 46% from the all-time high — but a soft quarter with weak margin commentary could push it lower from here.

Jefferies cut their Netflix target to $110 from $128 heading into the report, keeping a buy rating but flagging a lack of near-term catalysts. Bernstein also trimmed their target. Both kept buy ratings. That’s a pattern worth noting — analysts are cautious on timing, not conviction.

The Advertising Story Is What Actually Matters

Here’s where I’m at on Netflix. The engagement debate — is the World Cup stealing viewers? — is a distraction. The real trade is whether the advertising business is becoming structurally meaningful.

More than 60% of first-quarter sign-ups in markets offering the advertising plan chose that option. Netflix has said it now has thousands of advertising clients, and the company has said it is on pace for roughly $3 billion in advertising revenue in 2026 (about double the 2025 level).

That $3 billion target is not a rounding error. Netflix maintained its full-year revenue outlook of $50.7-$51.7 billion and raised its free cash flow guidance to approximately $12.5 billion, up from the previous $11 billion estimate. If you get a Q2 report where ad revenue is trending toward that $3B target and the FCF raise holds, the stock probably moves higher. Simple as that.

The live TV angle is newer and bigger than it looks right now. The Wall Street Journal reported in early July that Netflix is exploring the addition of live streaming channels and potentially incorporating other subscription-based streaming services. Netflix, Disney, and YouTube are all interested in competing for U.S. broadcast rights to the 2030 and 2034 FIFA World Cups, with media executives budgeting between $1.5 billion and $2 billion per tournament. This is a fundamental strategy shift — from subscription platform to everything platform. The market hasn’t fully priced it either way.

Bull Case / Bear Case / Neutral Case

Bull case: Q2 ad revenue tracking toward $3B target, management confirms peak content amortization has passed, FCF guidance holds at $12.5B, and live TV commentary adds a new re-rating angle. The stock is trading at a forward P/E of around 19x on 2027 estimates — genuinely cheap relative to its own history and the broader Nasdaq. For traders expecting a recovery: a defined-risk call spread targeting the $85-$95 range into the July 17 expiry. If you believe in the longer thesis, August or September calls let the story develop past the single-quarter noise.

Bear case: World Cup engagement headwinds show up worse than expected, ad revenue trails the $3B pace, and margin commentary disappoints. At current levels the stock has less margin for error than a year ago. A defined-risk put spread: long the $65 put, short the $60 put, expiring July 17. Captures downside if the report resets expectations lower.

Neutral case: Revenue lands in line, margins are roughly guided, the stock moves 3-4% either direction — well inside the implied 8% move. In a world where NFLX lands the number but doesn’t deliver a clear catalyst, IV crushes hard post-event. A short iron condor — sell the $85 call, buy the $90 call, sell the $65 put, buy the $60 put — profits from that vol collapse. Maximum gain is the premium received. Maximum loss is capped at the wing width minus premium.

What to Watch Beyond the Number

Three things on the July 16 call matter more than the headline EPS:

  • Ad tier growth: Did sign-up mix hold above 60% for the ad plan? Any update on the path to $3B ad revenue for 2026?
  • Live strategy specifics: Any concrete timeline on live channels or the World Cup rights discussions? This reframes the entire long-term story.
  • Back-half margin guidance: Management said content amortization peaks in Q2. Did it? Is the H2 margin expansion on track?

The stock is down 46% from its high. That discount exists for real reasons — engagement uncertainty, Reed Hastings’ departure, competitive pressure from Apple, Amazon, and Disney. But at this valuation, with an ad business doubling and a live pivot just getting started, the risk-reward is more interesting than it was six months ago.

What happens tomorrow doesn’t fully answer any of those questions. Management commentary will matter more than the EPS line. That’s usually when the real trade begins.

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