Netflix's (NFLX) second-quarter revenue fell short of Wall Street's estimates, while the streaming giant said it will no longer publish its engagement report semi-annually.
Revenue increased 13% annually to $12.56 billion in the June quarter, missing the consensus on FactSet of $12.58 billion. Per-share earnings climbed to $0.80 from $0.72 a year earlier, above the Street's $0.79 view.
Membership growth, pricing and increased ad revenue helped boost the top-line year-on-year, Netflix said in a letter to shareholders.
Morgan Stanley and Wedbush Securities expected Netflix's second-quarter results to be largely in line with expectations.
Netflix decided to begin publishing its "What We Watched" engagement report annually in the first quarter, beginning in 2027, compared with a twice-a-year frequency previously.
"The goal of separating the publication of the report from our earnings results is to keep the focus on our primary financial metrics -- revenue and operating profit," the company said.
It published the first-half engagement report Thursday, showing that members watched more than 97 billion hours of content on Netflix.
Shares plunged 8.8% in after-hours trading, and were down 21% this year through Thursday close.
Netflix projects third-quarter revenue rising 12% year-over-year to $12.86 billion, lower than analysts' $13 billion estimate. EPS is pegged at $0.82, versus the consensus view of $0.84.
For 2026, Netflix narrowed its revenue outlook to $51 billion to $51.4 billion, from the previous guidance of $50.7 billion to $51.7 billion, reflecting 13% to 14% annual growth. The consensus estimate is for $51.38 billion.



