Shares of Netflix are currently trading at a substantial discount compared to Wall Street’s expectations. The stock began Monday’s session at $87.02, sitting well below the analyst community’s average price objective of $114.82 — a valuation gap that has captured the attention of market watchers.
Netflix, Inc., NFLX
On May 13, Citi’s Jason Bazinet reaffirmed his bullish stance, maintaining a Buy recommendation with a $115 price objective. His optimism stems from the accelerating adoption of Netflix’s advertising-supported subscription option, strong engagement metrics among ad-tier subscribers, and the company’s strategy to roll out its ad platform to additional international markets.
Bazinet also drew attention to the streaming service’s development of innovative advertising formats alongside artificial intelligence-powered tools designed for both content creators and marketing partners. According to his analysis, these initiatives should expand available ad inventory while simultaneously enhancing campaign effectiveness.
JPMorgan echoed this positive sentiment, maintaining an Overweight rating paired with a $118 price target. The investment bank pointed to Netflix’s massive global subscriber base, strategic content investments, and continuous enhancements to its advertising infrastructure as fundamental drivers supporting their optimistic outlook.
Looking at the broader analyst community, Netflix maintains a Moderate Buy consensus rating. The breakdown includes two Strong Buy recommendations, 34 Buy ratings, and 16 Hold calls. The collective price target averages $114.82 per share.
On April 16, Netflix unveiled its first-quarter 2026 financial performance. The company delivered earnings of $1.23 per share, substantially exceeding the analyst consensus of $0.76 by $0.47. Revenue totaled $12.25 billion, edging past expectations of $12.17 billion.
This represented a 16.2% increase in revenue compared to the prior-year period. The company achieved a return on equity of 40.92% alongside a net profit margin of 28.52%. For the upcoming second quarter of 2026, Netflix has provided guidance calling for $0.78 in earnings per share.
Among institutional investors, Arrow Financial Corp made perhaps the most dramatic move last quarter. The firm expanded its Netflix holdings by an impressive 831.6% during the fourth quarter, purchasing 27,092 additional shares to reach a total position of 30,350 shares, worth approximately $2.85 million.
Numerous other institutional players also increased their allocations during the third quarter. Collectively, institutional shareholders now control 80.93% of outstanding Netflix shares.
Meanwhile, company insiders have been moving in the opposite direction. On May 7, CEO Gregory Peters divested 27,312 shares at an average execution price of $88.69, generating proceeds of roughly $2.42 million. This transaction decreased his ownership percentage by 18.42%.
That same day, CFO Spencer Neumann sold 9,253 shares at $88.95 per share, totaling approximately $823,000. His stake declined by 11.14% following the sale.
Throughout the past three months, company insiders have collectively sold 1.42 million shares worth about $135.1 million. Insiders currently maintain ownership of 1.24% of total shares outstanding.
NFLX has traded within a 52-week range spanning from $75.01 to $134.12. The stock’s 50-day moving average currently sits at $94.74, while the 200-day moving average registers at $94.67.
Valuation metrics show a price-to-earnings ratio of 28.11, a PEG ratio of 1.11, and a beta coefficient of 1.55. The company’s debt-to-equity ratio stands at 0.43.
Wall Street analysts project Netflix will generate full-year earnings of $3.60 per share for the current fiscal year.
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