Netflix Faces Earnings Risk After Stock’s $257 Billion Wipeout

Netflix Inc. has been one of the worst stocks in the market over the past 12 months as concerns about the video-streaming giant’s plans and prospects refuse to go away. Now, investors worry that its earnings report after the close will confirm those fears.

The shares have lost about 45% since hitting an all-time high on June 30, 2025, putting them among the 20 worst performers in the S&P 500 Index over that time and wiping out $257 billion in market value. They’ve slumped 31% since mid-April, when Netflix’s previous earnings report included a weak forecast and the news that Chairman Reed Hastings, the company’s co-founder and public face, was stepping down. This was just a few months after Netflix withdrew from the bidding to buy Warner Bros Discovery Inc., which ultimately inked a deal with Paramount Skydance Corp.

Shares were down 0.3% on Thursday.

netflix shares

Concerns about the company’s audience engagement and threats of competition have only been building since then. Last month, Meta Platforms Inc. announced that it’s exploring new formats for its Instagram for TV platform, suggesting more competition in the streaming arena. Meanwhile, movie theaters have experienced something of a revival, with audiences flocking to unexpected hits like Backrooms and Obsessions. Perhaps not surprisingly, Netflix is being trounced by stocks like Cinemark Holdings, Inc., Imax Corp. and AMC Entertainment Holdings Inc. this year.

All of which explains why these results represent something of an existential moment for Netflix shareholders. And it doesn’t help that the stock has fallen after each of its last four earnings reports.

“Right now, the idea of disruption is in the ether,” said Conrad Van Tienhoven, portfolio manager at Riverpark Capital, which holds Netflix shares. “We’ve had third-party data showing lower engagement, we have Netflix no longer giving subscriber numbers, and we have it looking at M&A for the first time. All of that makes up a trail of breadcrumbs that has led to the stock being where it is now. I hope the company realizes how important this call will be to change the view, especially since Reed Hastings is no longer around.”