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    Home»Markets & Economy»Free of Warner Bros., Netflix Is a Growth Stock Once Again
    Markets & Economy

    Free of Warner Bros., Netflix Is a Growth Stock Once Again

    FinsiderBy FinsiderMarch 9, 2026No Comments5 Mins Read
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    Free of Warner Bros., Netflix Is a Growth Stock Once Again
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    • Netflix (NFLX) surged 30% after walking away from an $83B Warner Bros. Discovery deal; 2025 revenue grew 16% to $45B with 29.5% margins; Paramount Skydance paid a $2.8B breakup fee.

    • Netflix dodged integration risk and debt burden by declining to match Paramount Skydance’s superior Warner Bros. Discovery bid, preserving capital for advertising expansion, content investment, and buybacks.

    • The analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named his top 10 AI stocks. Get them here FREE.

    Netflix’s (NASDAQ:NFLX) ambitious push to acquire key assets from Warner Bros. Discovery (NASDAQ:WBD) in late 2025 quickly turned sour. Investors feared the roughly $83 billion cash deal — priced at $27.75 per share — would saddle the streamer with massive new debt, crimping margins and diverting capital from its core streaming business. Shares plunged as the market priced in the risk.

    After several attempts,  Paramount Skydance (NASDAQ:PSKY) returned with a sweetened $31-per-share superior proposal, which Netflix wisely declined to match. When Warner Bros.’ board accepted the new bid last month, Netflix shares shot higher. Just two weeks later, the stock has surged 30% higher. Now, unburdened by the Warner Bros. anchor, Netflix is free to resume its former growth trajectory.

    Netflix never truly needed the Warner assets; its core business was already firing on all cylinders. In 2025, the company added millions of new subscribers while growing full-year revenue 16% to $45 billion. Operating margins expanded to 29.5%. For 2026, management is guiding for revenue growth of 12% to 14%, reaching as much as $51.7 billion and a 31.5% operating margin.

    READ: The analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named his top 10 AI stocks

    The collapse of the Warner Bros. deal removes any distraction, allowing Netflix to double down on what it does best: global expansion, original programming, and personalized recommendations. With password-sharing crackdowns largely complete and live sports and reality shows gaining traction, analysts expect another year of robust paid-member additions. Its remarkable core business can now grow without the overhang of integration risk.

    Netflix’s ad tier, once an experiment, is now a proven success. The company has aggressively rolled out the lower-priced, ad-supported plan across dozens of markets, converting millions of users and attracting new ones who never would have paid full freight. Ad revenue is climbing rapidly, delivering margins far higher than the traditional subscription business.

    Freed from the capital demands of a transformative acquisition, Netflix can accelerate ad-tier innovation — better targeting, more premium ad formats, and partnerships with major brands. This revenue stream, virtually nonexistent a few years ago, is now poised to contribute meaningfully to the bottom line and support the 30% stock rebound we’ve already witnessed.

    Netflix has always thrived by outspending rivals on compelling content. With the $2.8 billion breakup fee from Paramount Skydance now in hand, and share repurchases paused during the bidding process back on the table, the company has fresh dry powder.

    Management plans to invest roughly $20 billion in content through 2026, focusing on high-ROI originals and licensed hits that drive retention and acquisition. At the same time, resuming buybacks  —  a practice that consistently supported the stock during previous growth phases — will return excess capital directly to shareholders.

    The combination of organic growth, advertising tailwinds, and disciplined capital return positions Netflix to deliver the kind of earnings expansion that once made it a Wall Street darling.

    Netflix looks ready to reclaim its status as a true growth stock. The market has rewarded management’s discipline in walking away from a deal that would have diluted focus and loaded the balance sheet with debt. Subscriber growth is reaccelerating, advertising is scaling profitably, content spending remains robust, and the $2.8 billion windfall plus restarted buybacks give the company multiple levers to create value.

    Yet that doesn’t mean investors can rest easy. Management has signaled it remains open to acquisitions — and that’s fine as long as they are complementary, bolt-on deals that enhance the platform without derailing the core strategy. Any return to a transformative, debt-heavy bid could quickly reverse the 30% rally. For now, though, Netflix is unencumbered and back on the growth path it knows best. Wall Street is once again bullish, upgrading the stock and raising their price targets, and with good reason.

    Wall Street is pouring billions into AI, but most investors are buying the wrong stocks. The analyst who first identified NVIDIA as a buy back in 2010 — before its 28,000% run — has just pinpointed 10 new AI companies he believes could deliver outsized returns from here. One dominates a $100 billion equipment market. Another is solving the single biggest bottleneck holding back AI data centers. A third is a pure-play on an optical networking market set to quadruple. Most investors haven’t heard of half these names. Get the free list of all 10 stocks here.

    Bros Free growth Netflix Stock Warner
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