The post Netflix’s Next Act: Beyond Streaming appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..
Netflix (NASDAQ: NFLX) shares closed at $71.84 on June 24, 2026, down 23.4% year to date and 43.8% over the trailing 12 months. The slump has reopened a debate investors thought was settled in 2024: where does the next leg of growth come from? Management’s answer increasingly centers on adjacencies, not just subscriber additions.
The ad-supported tier is the most quantifiable pillar. In Q1 2026, it accounted for over 60% of sign-ups in ad-supported countries, with the advertiser count growing 70% year over year to more than 4,000 clients. Co-CEO Greg Peters reaffirmed the trajectory on the Q1 call: “That includes roughly doubling the advertising business to about $3 billion.” Netflix’s Acxiom AI partnership and GenAI ad creative tools are designed to narrow the gap with Alphabet and Meta Platforms on targeting, but ad revenue remains a small slice of $12.25 billion in Q1 revenue.
Gaming is earlier-stage. The Netflix Playground kids app, cloud-delivered TV party games (Boggle, Pictionary, Lego Party, Tetris), and a new FIFA-branded football simulation extend the brand into interactive formats. Live programming is doing the heavier near-term lifting: the World Baseball Classic in Japan became the most-watched Netflix program ever in that country, and Canelo vs. Crawford drew over 41 million viewers. Netflix Houses opened in Dallas and King of Prussia, and the KPop Demon Hunters franchise now has Mattel and Hasbro as co-master toy licensees.
Adjacencies matter because the core engine still compounds. Peters framed the total addressable market bluntly: “From an addressable household perspective, we have good data and smart TVs, we are still under 45% penetrated… We estimate that we account for only 5% of TV view share globally.” Full-year 2026 guidance calls for revenue of $50.7 billion to $51.7 billion and a 31.5% operating margin, with free cash flow raised to about $12.5 billion after the $2.8 billion Warner Bros. deal termination fee.
At a trailing P/E of roughly 24 and forward P/E near 23, Netflix trades closer to a mature media multiple than a hyper-growth one. The Wall Street mean price target is $114.15, with a consensus recommendation to buy shares. Polymarket is more cautious: traders assign a 59% probability of the stock closing June 2026 near $70.
The takeaway on the thesis: advertising is scaling fast and measurable, while gaming, live, and experiences remain promising but unproven at scale. With net insider selling across 121 recent transactions, the next earnings report will need to show the adjacencies pulling more weight.
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