Netflix shares are down 21% in 2026, but its ad and live sports push echoes the pivot that sparked a 300% recovery after 2022.
Netflix shares are down 21% in 2026, but its ad and live sports push echoes the pivot that sparked a 300% recovery after 2022.

Netflix's advertising business is on track to nearly double to $3 billion in 2026, with 4,000 advertisers and programmatic buying exceeding half of non-live ad sales, as the streaming pioneer diversifies beyond subscriptions.
"The streaming wars are effectively over and Netflix won," said Alex Sirois, a markets writer at 247 Wall St. "A 31.5% operating margin target against a Disney SVOD business that just crossed 10.6% backs that read."
The company's first-quarter 2026 revenue reached $12.25 billion, up 16% year over year, while free cash flow hit $5.09 billion on just $196 million in capital spending. That compares with Walt Disney's $1.97 billion in quarterly capex and a 25% decline in net income. Netflix's ad tier now accounts for more than 60% of new sign-ups in markets where it is available, and the company plans to bring the offering to 15 additional countries in 2027. On the live programming front, Netflix has stacked its calendar with NFL games, including a regular-season matchup in Australia, and secured the Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show. Content amortization is expected to peak in the second quarter of 2026, which should support margin expansion in the second half.
The stock's 21% year-to-date decline mirrors the setup from April 2022, when Netflix lost 35% in a single day after reporting its first subscriber drop in a decade. Shares fell 60% that year before the password-sharing crackdown and ad-tier launch drove a 300% recovery. Netflix trades at a discount to that period's peak, with $6.8 billion still authorized for share buybacks and 2026 free cash flow guidance raised to roughly $12.5 billion.
Netflix's advertising infrastructure is maturing rapidly. The company is rolling out dynamic ad insertion for live programming and expanding its proprietary Netflix Ads Suite with improved targeting, frequency management, and audience measurement tools. Integrations with leading demand-side platforms have eased programmatic buying, helping the advertiser base grow 70% in 2025 to more than 4,000 clients. Programmatic buying is on track to account for more than half of the non-live advertising business, a sign of improved platform adoption among brands. Zacks Equity Research projects advertising revenues will nearly double to around $3 billion for 2026, supported by strong advertiser adoption.
The ad business still faces competition from Roku and Amazon, which are investing in AI-powered optimization and first-party shopping data for their connected TV platforms. Roku is expanding its advertising platform with AI-powered optimization, identity solutions, and advanced measurement capabilities. Amazon is strengthening Prime Video's advertising capabilities by using its ad-tech infrastructure and first-party shopping data. Netflix's smaller scale in CTV advertising means sustained adoption of new formats and measurement tools will be necessary to close the gap, according to Zacks Equity Research.
In June, Netflix launched a partnership with French broadcaster TF1 Group, bringing live channels and on-demand content into the Netflix app for the first time. The deal marks Netflix's first distribution of third-party linear channels and points to a broader ambition to become the front door for television itself. The company has also locked in NFL games, including a regular-season matchup staged in Australia, and secured the Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show, building a live programming slate that supports both subscriber retention and ad inventory. The live push extends beyond sports: Netflix's World Baseball Classic coverage became the most-watched program in the company's history in Japan.
For patient investors, the gap between Netflix's falling share price and its expanding business model is the kind of disconnect that historically rewards those who hold through the drawdown. The company's 31.5% operating margin target, $12.5 billion in projected free cash flow, and growing advertising revenue provide a cushion that did not exist during the 2022 downturn. Netflix repurchased 13.5 million shares for $1.3 billion in the first quarter, with $6.8 billion still authorized. The question is whether the market will re-rate the stock before those numbers materialize.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.