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After acquiring Warner Bros, Netflix’s shares experienced a decline of over 3% due to this deal

by VT Markets
/
Dec 6, 2025

Netflix shares have dropped over 3% after announcing its acquisition of Warner Bros. Discovery, valued at $82 billion at $30 per share. This move suggests Netflix’s organic growth has stalled, necessitating revenue acquisition.

Historically, Netflix enjoyed a premium valuation due to its unique growth strategy. However, this deal implies that the company’s innovative edge might be diminishing. From a technical analysis perspective, Netflix’s stock has breached a critical trendline from October 2023.

This breach indicates a longer-term structural decline in the stock. Projections suggest a continued downturn, with a potential target of $70 per share by 2026. This level would align Netflix’s valuation with the broader streaming sector, reflecting the shift in its growth strategy.

Given the market’s negative response to the acquisition, we see this as a clear signal to establish bearish positions on Netflix. The immediate breakdown of a key technical support level suggests that the path of least resistance is now lower. Traders should be looking at buying put options with expirations in January and February 2026 to capitalize on this expected near-term weakness.

This move feels like a painful echo of the subscriber growth panic we saw back in 2022, but this time it’s an admission from management that the old growth model is finished. Recent data supports this, as we saw subscriber additions in Q3 2025 slow to just 1.5 million globally, a sharp deceleration from the post-password-crackdown boom of 2024. This acquisition is a costly attempt to buy the growth that can no longer be generated internally.

We must also consider the enormous debt this deal creates, which will fundamentally alter Netflix’s financial profile for the worse. Warner Bros. was already carrying over $40 billion in debt, and adding the $82 billion acquisition cost will cause Netflix’s debt-to-equity ratio to surge from a manageable 0.8 to well over 2.5. This transforms the company from a nimble tech innovator into a heavily leveraged, slow-growth media conglomerate.

With implied volatility spiking on this news, buying puts outright has become expensive. A more prudent strategy would be to use credit spreads, like selling a call spread, or to initiate debit spreads, such as a bear put spread, to lower the entry cost. This allows us to maintain a bearish outlook while mitigating the impact of high premiums.

The violation of the trendline that held since October 2023 is not a minor event; it is a significant change in character for the stock. We should treat any small rally as an opportunity to add to short positions, as the chart structure now supports a prolonged decline. That $70 price target for 2026 seems increasingly plausible as the stock begins to shed its long-held tech premium.

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