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The Single Reason Wall Street Can’t Quit Netflix Stock

The Single Reason Wall Street Can’t Quit Netflix Stock

Author:
foolstock
Published:
2025-09-12 01:05:00
7
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Netflix just rewrote the streaming rulebook—and institutional investors are scrambling for position.

Subscriber Surge Defies Gravity

While legacy media stumbles through merger drama and content bloat, Netflix’s global dominance keeps accelerating. No shaky ad-tier experiments here—just relentless user growth that keeps smashing projections.

The Algorithm Edge

Forget content wars. The real moat is data-driven personalization that hooks viewers and crushes churn. Traditional studios? Still trying to crack the code.

Cash Flow King

Netflix prints operating cash like a central bank—while rivals bleed billions chasing their tail. Wall Street loves nothing more than a cash machine that actually works.

Of course, if history’s any guide, the Street will pivot from obsession to panic the second growth hiccups. But for now? They’re all-in on the one streamer that actually figured out the playbook.

Building with Netflix logo on top.

Image source: Netflix.

Netflix has a scale advantage

Netflix has come to dominate the streaming landscape. However, the bears had a valid argument early on. Since creating and licensing content is so expensive, there were worries that the business WOULD never generate positive free cash flow (FCF). Even though Netflix was growing its subscribers and revenue quickly, the thinking was that it would never be enough.

This is no longer a concern. Netflix raked in $6.9 billion in FCF in 2024, with management expecting $8 billion to $8.5 billion this year. This is up significantly from a loss of $3.3 billion in 2019. Netflix is using excess cash to repurchase shares.

The company is demonstrating the advantage it has achieved from its massive scale. Netflix can spread large content costs over a huge customer and revenue base, allowing it to generate robust profits.

Growth at an expensive price

Netflix's bottom line is impressive. However, investors shouldn't let this take away from the ongoing growth story. The company's sales increased 16% year over year to $11.1 billion in Q2 (ended June 30).

It's clear Netflix is thriving these days. But this doesn't mean the stock is a no-brainer buy. With shares trading at a steep price-to-earnings ratio of 53.7, it might be best to wait for a sizable pullback before putting money to work.

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