Skip to main content

netflix

2 articles found

NFLX Analysis: The Warner Bros. Gambit — Why Netflix's 42% Drawdown From Highs Creates a Rare Entry Point Into Streaming's Only Profitable Juggernaut

Netflix trades at $77.95 as of February 18, 2026 — a staggering 42% below its 52-week high of $134.12 and well below its 50-day moving average of $89.32. The stock that once seemed untouchable has been humbled by a confluence of factors: investor anxiety over a potential acquisition of Warner Bros. Discovery assets, broader market rotation out of megacap tech, and lingering AI disruption fears that have rattled the entire media sector. At a $330 billion market cap, Netflix is priced as if something has fundamentally broken. Nothing has. Netflix just posted full-year 2025 revenue of $45.2 billion with $10.98 billion in net income and $9.46 billion in free cash flow — all record figures. Operating margins expanded meaningfully throughout the year, the ad-supported tier continued scaling, and the company returned $9.1 billion to shareholders through buybacks. The business has never been stronger, yet the stock is trading at roughly 31x trailing earnings, its lowest valuation multiple in over two years. The central question for investors now is whether the Warner Bros. Discovery acquisition chatter — and the associated fear of Netflix overpaying for legacy media assets — justifies such a severe discount. Or whether this selloff, driven more by sentiment than substance, represents one of the most compelling entry points into the dominant streaming platform since the post-pandemic correction of 2022. The data overwhelmingly supports the latter thesis.

NetflixNFLXstreaming

News: Hollywood Escalates War on ByteDance's Seedance 2.0 as MPA Issues Formal Cease-and-Desist and Studios Threaten Litigation

The confrontation between Hollywood and ByteDance over the Chinese tech giant's AI video generator Seedance 2.0 has escalated dramatically, with the Motion Picture Association sending a formal cease-and-desist letter demanding that ByteDance explain by February 27 exactly what steps it has taken to halt copyright infringement on the platform. The letter, sent on behalf of all seven MPA member studios, accused Seedance 2.0 of engaging in "systemic infringement rather than inadvertence," describing the tool's copyright violations as "a feature, not a bug." The legal offensive now involves cease-and-desist letters from six individual studios — Disney, Paramount Skydance, Netflix, Sony, Warner Bros. Discovery, and Universal — with Netflix reportedly threatening "immediate litigation" if ByteDance does not comply. The industry-wide response represents one of the most unified actions Hollywood has taken against a single AI company, surpassing earlier disputes with firms like Midjourney and Stability AI in both scope and intensity. ByteDance has so far responded with only a two-sentence statement pledging to "strengthen current safeguards," a response that MPA general counsel Karyn Temple dismissed as inadequate. The dispute has set up a critical deadline: ByteDance has until February 27 to provide a substantive response, or face the prospect of coordinated legal action from some of the most powerful entertainment companies in the world.

ByteDanceSeedance 2.0AI video generation