Netflix Stock’s Last Decade Was Spectacular. But What Will the Next Decade Look Like?

On July 18, 2016 (about ten years ago to the day), Netflix (NASDAQ: NFLX) shares closed at a split-adjusted $9.88. A $10,000 investment at that price would have bought about 1,010 shares, and with the stock at about $68 as of this writing, that stake would be worth about $68,500 today. That works out to…


Netflix Stock’s Last Decade Was Spectacular. But What Will the Next Decade Look Like?

On July 18, 2016 (about ten years ago to the day), Netflix (NASDAQ: NFLX) shares closed at a split-adjusted $9.88. A $10,000 investment at that price would have bought about 1,010 shares, and with the stock at about $68 as of this writing, that stake would be worth about $68,500 today. That works out to a compound annual return of about 21%. The same $10,000 in the S&P 500 (SNPINDEX: ^GSPC) would have grown to roughly $35,000, before dividends.

That return wasn’t earned comfortably, though. Holding meant sitting through some ugly weeks, including that very one: the day after Netflix’s second-quarter 2016 report showed subscriber growth coming in well below the company’s own forecast, shares sank 13%.

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Anyone who bought into that plunge did even better, turning $10,000 into nearly $79,000.

And just a few days ago (almost exactly ten years later), Netflix fell hard after a second-quarter report once again. Shares dropped about 9% in after-hours trading as the streaming giant’s forecast pointed to slower growth ahead.

The harder call, I think, is whether Netflix can keep compounding from here. Its latest report offers some clues.

The Netflix logo on top of a building.
Image source: Netflix.

Slowing growth

Today’s Netflix would be nearly unrecognizable to a 2016 shareholder. The company now generates more revenue in a single quarter ($12.6 billion in Q2) than the $8.8 billion it produced in all of 2016.

The second quarter itself was solid. Revenue rose 13% year over year, in line with management’s guidance, with double-digit growth in every region. Earnings per share rose 11% year over year to $0.80. And Netflix’s operating margin was 33.4%, down slightly from 34.1% in the year-ago quarter because the company’s content amortization is growing faster in the first half of the year. For the full year, management still expects an operating margin of 31.5%, up from 29.5% in 2025.

Also worth noting: Engagement looks healthy. Members watched more than 97 billion hours of content in the first half of 2026, the company’s highest half-year total to date.

The problem is the trajectory. Netflix’s year-over-year revenue growth rate has decelerated every quarter this year, from 17.6% in the fourth quarter of 2025 to 16.2% in Q1, 13.4% in Q2, and a forecast of just 11.7% for Q3. Management also narrowed its full-year revenue outlook to $51.0 billion to $51.4 billion, representing 13% to 14% growth.

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