A strong slate of recent original shows and live events is likely to have encouraged people to sign up for the streaming service.
Netflix Inc. may have a hard time topping its mammoth 2024, but Wall Street is optimistic about offerings that include major names in entertainment and sports.
We enter 2025 with strong momentum,” Netflix said in its note to investors, saying it added a record 41 million subscribers in 2024 and re-accelerated growth.
The company also announced a $15 billion stock buyback and boosted its full-year revenue outlook in its after-hours report on Tuesday. Netflix now projects 2025 revenue between $43.5 billion and $44.5 billion, ahead of the prior $43 billion to $44 billion range.
While many would favor Daniel Cormier to ragdoll Mike Tyson in a street fight, a former UFC champion isn’t convinced. The gifted mixed martial artist has explained the method ‘Iron Mike ...
Netflix reaffirmed its dominance of the streaming video market on Tuesday, as its mixture of live sporting events, popular returning series - and
Netflix stock zooms 15% to hit record high of $988 on subscriber growth boost, global base swells to 300 million
Netflix stock (NFLX) closed at an all-time high on Wednesday, finishing the day up nearly 10% as Wall Street analysts praised the company's fourth quarter earnings results. Shortly after the opening bell,
Netflix, Oracle and other technology stocks are lifting U.S. indexes as their profits pile higher and excitement builds around the moneymaking prospects of artificial intelligence. The S&P 500 rose 0.
Netflix shares are surging into record territory, up 10% in Tuesday's extended session. This is breaking news. Check back for updates. The following is a preview published before earnings were released.
Netflix (NFLX) called out success in live programming, including with its Jake Paul-Mike Tyson boxing match and NFL Christmas slate. "Although our live programming will likely be a small percentage of our total view hours and content expense, we think the eventized nature will result in outsized value to both our members and our business."
Barclays analyst Benjamin Theurer lowered the firm’s price target on Tyson Foods (TSN) to $75 from $76 and keeps an Overweight rating on the