Wall Street ticks up to another record
Digest more
While rival media companies are unloading assets and cutting costs, Netflix Inc. continues to thrive.The owner of the world’s most popular paid streaming service on Thursday reported second-quarter results that exceeded investor expectations in every major metric,
If you're looking to invest in Netflix, now might be a good time. Many experts have a positive take and expect it to move well above its current price.
With a market value now exceeding $500 billion, the streaming giant faces pressure to keep growing.
But dig beneath the surface and you'll discover why neither Costco Wholesale nor Netflix are eager to become Wall Street's next stock-split stock. The simple reason Costco makes for a poor candidate to split its stock is that its management team doesn't feel it's necessary.
As earnings season heats up, Wall Street is sending a clear signal that strong results may no longer be enough to satisfy investors amid record-high valuations and tariff uncertainty.
Wall Street's skepticism about Netflix's business growth is slowly dissipating. Going against the broader market, Netflix soared nearly 10% in one month while the S&P 500 plummeted nearly 8% in ...
Wall Street’s initial view on Netflix’s advertising tier plans. Analysts spent much time discussing Netflix’s plans to launch an ad-supported lower-priced subscriber tier down the line.
Netflix, which had ended 2022 with 230.75 million global subscribers, launched what it calls “paid sharing” plans in Canada, New Zealand, Spain and Portugal in early February after trials in ...
Tard’s abandoned bid for Seven & i exposes mounting pressures in its own business. And $17,000 made-in-China Chevys are winning hearts in Mexico. Listen to the day’s top stories.
Netflix Analysts Upgrade Stock, Boost Price Targets After Quarterly Results "We've gone from a historical bear on Netflix to a card-carrying bull," writes one Wall Street observer.
A healthy crop of earnings helped European stocks bust out of a four-day losing streak on Thursday, Wall Street was watching Netflix and the dollar bounced after U.S. President Donald Trump quashed talk he was about to fire Fed head Jerome Powell.