Dear readers,
Yesterday we framed Netflix’s earnings as the test case for a market that wants proof, not promises, that platforms can turn AI investment into cash. The results are in, and the verdict is a hard no — at least for now. Shares slid 9% in after-hours trading following Thursday’s report, dragging the stock to a fresh 52-week low near $67.62. This wasn’t a case of Netflix stumbling operationally. It was a case of a market that has stopped grading on a curve.
The Guidance Gap
The headline numbers actually held up. Netflix posted second-quarter revenue of $12.56 billion, up 13.4% year over year, with net income of $3.4 billion, or 80 cents per share — narrowly ahead of the 79-cent estimate, even as revenue landed just shy of consensus. The trouble showed up in the outlook. Netflix guided third-quarter revenue to $12.86 billion, implying 11.7% growth, well below the roughly $13 billion and 13% growth Wall Street had modeled ahead of the release. Third-quarter EPS guidance of 82 cents also missed the 84-cent consensus. In a tape that has been pricing tech names for flawless execution, “solid” guidance is now read as a warning sign rather than reassurance.
Going Dark on the Data
What compounded the damage was Netflix’s decision to pull back on transparency at the worst possible moment. The company said it would retire the quarterly cadence of its “What We Watched” report, shifting to an annual release each first quarter starting in 2027. For investors trying to gauge content performance and subscriber retention in real time, losing that window reads less like a housekeeping change and more like a company that would rather not show its hand. Internally, Netflix is leaning hard on cost discipline to offset the growth slowdown — generative AI tools are now deployed across roughly 300 productions this year, mostly in post-production, with pilot programs cutting production timelines in half and slashing costs. But efficiency gains can only do so much; the company still needs its advertising business, on track for roughly $3 billion in 2026 revenue — nearly double last year’s figure — to prove the platform’s second growth engine is real. Wall Street’s price-target revisions capture the shift in mood: Guggenheim’s Michael Morris cut his target by $45, to $75 from $120; Wedbush’s Alicia Reese trimmed hers by $13, to $105; and TD Cowen’s John Blackledge lowered his to $100 from $112.
From Computing Beta to Cash-Flow Alpha
Netflix is simply the most visible casualty of a rotation that’s reshaping how Wall Street prices the entire AI trade. Citigroup and Morgan Stanley are now explicitly describing a shift from “AI Computing Beta” to “Cash Flow Alpha” — money moving out of crowded, capital-intensive hardware names and into businesses with established platforms, entrenched user bases, and the ability to monetize immediately rather than eventually. The stakes are enormous: 43% of S&P 500 constituents, representing more than 62% of the index’s market capitalization, are now directly tied to the AI economy. With that much of the market’s fate riding on a single theme, investors are increasingly unwilling to fund infrastructure bets on faith alone, pushing capital toward defensive sectors, cyclicals, and software franchises that can already show the receipts.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Alibaba?
Asia Shows What Monetization Looks Like
If US investors want a preview of what “results delivery” actually looks like, they’d do well to look east. Baidu reported that its AI core revenue jumped 49% to 13.6 billion yuan, with AI now accounting for 52% of total core revenue — the first time it has crossed the halfway mark. Separately, Alibaba-backed Moonshot AI rattled the industry with its new Kimi K3 model, which appears to close much of the performance gap with leading US systems like Anthropic’s Opus. For a market currently punishing platforms that talk about AI more than they profit from it, China’s fastest movers are offering an inconvenient counterexample.
The Macro Undertow
None of this is unfolding in a vacuum. Middle East tensions escalated further as US strikes hit Iranian infrastructure for a sixth consecutive night, pushing Brent crude up more than 2.5% to $86.31 a barrel and adding fresh inflation risk to an already jittery macro backdrop. Bitcoin slipped below $63,000 as risk appetite thinned. In Europe, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz confirmed on July 15 that Berlin will not block UniCredit’s bid for Commerzbank, even as he made his displeasure with the Italian lender’s tactics plain: “We are not preventing this merger or this takeover, nor have we ever attempted to do so,” he said, adding that “the manner in which Commerzbank was targeted does not meet with our approval.” The comments align with the EU Commission’s broader push to consolidate European banks into globally competitive players. Even in chips, TSMC’s blockbuster $40.2 billion quarterly revenue is barely registering against the sector’s broader slide — further evidence that strong numbers alone no longer move the tape.
The Takeaway
The pattern across Netflix, TSMC, and the broader AI trade is consistent: growth and even record profitability are now table stakes, not selling points. What separates winners from losers this earnings season is the ability to show, in hard cash-flow terms, that AI spending is paying for itself today — not eventually. Baidu and Moonshot AI just offered a glimpse of what that proof looks like. American platforms have a few weeks left to produce their own version before investors draw their own conclusions.
Best regards,
The StocksToday.com Editorial
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