C

Netflix (NFLX) 2025 — $72B WBD Acquisition, Subscriber Blackout

NFLX·2025·English

Grade: C — Some Red Flags, Investigate

Framework: Schilit *Financial Shenanigans* + Beneish M-Score + forensic accounting principles

Data: SEC EDGAR 10-K (Filed 2026-01-23) + Yahoo Finance

Auditor: Ernst & Young LLP — Clean opinion (1 critical audit matter: content amortization)

One-line verdict: Netflix should not be flagged for elimination, but the C grade demands investigation. Revenue surged 16% to $45.2B and net income hit $11.0B — yet the company's $32.8B content asset pile (59% of total assets, 123% of equity) is the single largest judgment call on the balance sheet. EY flagged content amortization as their sole critical audit matter because the amortization schedule depends on "historical and forecasted viewing patterns" — an estimate entirely under management's control. The M-Score sits in the grey zone at -1.98, AR growth outpaced revenue growth 52% vs 16%, and CapEx surged 57%. These are not smoking guns, but they are enough smoke to warrant scrutiny.

MetricResult
Red Flags**1** (intangible assets exceed equity)
Watch Items**4** (AR growth, CapEx growth, cash vs debt, M-Score grey zone)
Checks Completed**17/18**
Beneish M-Score**-1.98** (grey zone)
AuditorErnst & Young — Unqualified opinion

The Streaming Juggernaut's Numbers

Netflix is the world's largest streaming entertainment service. In FY2025, the company discontinued reporting membership numbers, stating it would focus instead on "revenue and operating margin as the primary financial metrics." That disclosure shift itself is notable — it removed a key metric investors previously used to evaluate growth.

MetricFY2022FY2023FY2024FY2025Trend
Revenue$31.6B$33.7B$39.0B$45.2B+16%
Net Income$4.5B$5.4B$8.7B$11.0B+26%
Operating Income$7.0B$10.4B$13.3B+28%
Operating Margin20.6%26.7%29.5%+2.8pp
Gross Margin39.4%41.5%46.1%48.5%+2.4pp
Net Margin14.2%16.0%22.3%24.3%+2.0pp
ROE21.6%26.3%35.2%41.3%Rising

From the 10-K: "Operating margin for the year ended December 31, 2025 increased by approximately three percentage points as compared to the prior comparative period, primarily driven by the growth in revenues outpacing the growth in cost of revenues, sales and marketing, and general and administrative expenses."

Revenue grew 16% ($6.2B increase), driven by membership growth, price increases, and advertising revenue. Revenue from advertising and other non-membership sources "were not a material component of revenues" for FY2025 — meaning the subscription flywheel still dominates.

Revenue by Region

RegionFY2025FY2024Growth
UCAN$20.0B$17.4B+15%
EMEA$14.5B$12.4B+17%
LATAM$5.4B$4.8B+11%
APAC$5.4B$4.4B+21%
**Total****$45.2B****$39.0B****+16%**

APAC grew fastest at 21%, while LATAM lagged at 11%. On a constant currency basis, LATAM actually grew 23% — FX headwinds masked real growth.

The $32.8 Billion Content Asset Question

Netflix's balance sheet is dominated by one line item: Content assets, net: $32.8B (vs. $32.5B prior year). This represents 59% of total assets of $55.6B and 123% of stockholders' equity of $26.6B.

The breakdown from the 10-K:

Content TypeFY2025FY2024
Licensed content, net$12.1B$12.4B
Produced content (released)$10.7B$10.2B
Produced content (in production)$9.2B$9.3B
Produced content (development)$0.7B$0.6B
**Total****$32.8B****$32.5B**

Content amortization for FY2025 was $16.4B (vs. $15.3B prior year), while Netflix added $17.1B in new content. The net effect: content assets grew only $326M, meaning the company is roughly replacing what it amortizes.

Why this matters for earnings quality: Netflix amortizes content "based on factors including historical and estimated viewing patterns." The 10-K explicitly states: "If actual viewing patterns differ from these estimates, the pattern and/or period of amortization would be changed and could affect the timing of recognition of content amortization."

Ernst & Young flagged this as their sole Critical Audit Matter: "Auditing the amortization of the Company's Content is complex and subjective due to the judgmental nature of amortization which is based on an estimate of future viewing patterns."

In other words, $16.4B — the largest single expense line — flows through an amortization model that depends entirely on management's forecast of how many people will watch what, and when. A modest shift in viewing pattern assumptions would move billions through the income statement.

Cash Flow: Strong, But Watch the Gap

MetricFY2023FY2024FY2025
Operating Cash Flow$7.3B$7.4B$10.1B
CapEx$(0.3B)$(0.4B)$(0.7B)
Free Cash Flow$6.9B$6.9B$9.5B
CFFO / Net Income1.350.850.92
Content Additions$(12.6B)$(16.2B)$(17.1B)
Content Amortization$14.2B$15.3B$16.4B

CFFO-to-NI ratio dropped from 1.35 in FY2023 to 0.92 in FY2025. The ratio remains acceptable (above 0.80), but the declining trend deserves attention. From the cash flow statement, net income of $11.0B produced $10.1B in operating cash flow — the gap driven by $790M unfavorable working capital changes (primarily "other current assets") and $794M in "other non-current assets and liabilities."

The company spent $9.1B on stock buybacks and $1.8B on debt repayment, funded by operating cash flow. No dividend is paid.

Shareholder Returns: Buyback Machine Activated

From the 10-K: "In the fiscal year ended December 31, 2025, the Company repurchased 86,536,215 shares of common stock for an aggregate amount of $9.1 billion." The Board authorized $15B in additional buybacks in December 2024, on top of a prior $10B authorization.

Netflix also established a $3B commercial paper program in May 2025 and has a $3B revolving credit facility (undrawn). The company is clearly transitioning from growth-mode to capital-return-mode.

The 18-Point Screening

Revenue Quality

#CheckResultDetail
A1DSOPassDSO 16 days, +4 days YoY. Short collection cycle
A2AR vs RevenueWatchAR growth 52.1% far exceeds revenue growth 15.9%
A3Revenue vs CFFOPassRevenue +16%, CFFO +38%. Cash outpaces revenue

A2: AR growing 3x faster than revenue is a yellow flag. In most companies, this signals channel stuffing or aggressive revenue recognition. For Netflix, the likely explanation is the ad-supported tier — advertising receivables have longer collection cycles than consumer subscriptions paid in advance. But the magnitude warrants monitoring.

Expense Quality

#CheckResultDetail
B1InventoryPassNo inventory — digital business
B2CapExWatchCapEx growth 57% is >2x revenue growth 16%
B3SG&A RatioPassSG&A/Gross Profit = 23.7%, excellent
B4Gross MarginPass48.5%, +2.4pp YoY. Improving

B2: CapEx surged from $440M to $688M. The 10-K attributes this to property and equipment purchases, likely related to Open Connect CDN expansion and production infrastructure. Not alarming for a company at this scale, but the growth rate (57%) significantly exceeded revenue growth (16%).

Cash Flow Quality

#CheckResultDetail
C1CFFO vs NIPassRatio 0.92. Profits backed by cash
C2FCFPass$9.5B, FCF/NI = 0.86
C3AccrualsPass1.5% accruals ratio. Low
C4Cash vs DebtWatchCash $9.1B covers 63% of debt $14.5B

C4: Netflix carries $14.5B in debt (short-term $1.0B + long-term $13.5B). Cash and equivalents of $9.0B plus short-term investments of $29M cover only 63% of total debt. From the 10-K, in FY2025 the company repaid "$800 million aggregate principal amount of its 5.875% Senior Notes, the EUR 470 million aggregate principal amount of its 3.000% Senior Notes, and the $500 million aggregate principal amount of its 3.625% Senior Notes." Debt is being paid down, not growing — debt decreased by $1.1B YoY. With $9.5B annual FCF, the $14.5B debt load is manageable (Debt/EBITDA = 0.5x).

Balance Sheet

#CheckResultDetail
D1Goodwill + IntangiblesFail$32.8B = 123% of equity
D2LeveragePassDebt/EBITDA 0.5x, interest coverage 17.2x
D3Soft Asset GrowthPassOther assets +20% vs revenue +16%. Normal
D4ImpairmentN/ANo write-off data

D1: This is the fail, but context matters. The $32.8B is entirely content assets — there is $0 in traditional goodwill. Netflix's "intangible assets" are not the result of overpaying for acquisitions. They are the capitalized cost of content (TV shows, films, games) that Netflix either licenses or produces. The balance grew only 1% YoY ($32.5B to $32.8B), and is amortized at $16.4B per year — a 50% amortization rate. This is Netflix's inventory equivalent. The screening engine correctly flags the size relative to equity, but the risk profile is fundamentally different from, say, a serial acquirer with $32B in goodwill from overpriced deals.

M&A Risk

#CheckResultDetail
E1Post-Acquisition FCFPassFCF after acquisitions positive
E2Goodwill SurgePassIntangibles grew only 1% YoY

Beneish M-Score

#CheckResultDetail
F1M-ScoreWatch-1.98 (grey zone: between -2.22 and -1.78)

The M-Score of -1.98 sits in the grey zone. The primary driver is the DSRI (Days Sales in Receivables Index) of 1.313 — reflecting the AR growth flag discussed above. The SGI (Sales Growth Index) of 1.159 reflects the 16% revenue growth, which is healthy organic growth, not a red flag. No individual component screams manipulation, but the aggregate score warrants monitoring.

Key Risks from Item 1A

The 10-K identifies several material risks:

1. Content is everything — and it's expensive. Netflix spent $17.1B on new content in FY2025. The 10-K warns: "If our efforts to attract and retain members are not successful, our business will be adversely affected... our content costs are largely fixed in nature" — meaning if growth stalls, margins compress fast.

2. Intense competition. The risk factors cite: "Competitors include other entertainment video providers, such as linear television, streaming entertainment providers (including those that provide pirated content), video gaming providers, open content platform providers." Netflix specifically calls out piracy: "its fundamental proposition to consumers is so compelling and difficult to compete against: virtually all content for free."

3. AI disruption. The 10-K warns: "new technological developments, including the development and use of generative AI, are rapidly evolving. If our competitors gain an advantage by using such technologies more effectively to satisfy consumer demand, our ability to compete successfully and our results of operations could be adversely impacted."

4. Price sensitivity. Netflix acknowledges its price increases "may not be well-received by consumers, and could negatively impact our ability to attract and retain members."

Altman Z-Score and F-Score

ModelScoreInterpretation
Altman Z-Score**5.32**Safe zone (>2.99). No bankruptcy risk
F-Score (Dechow)**1.39**Low fraud probability (0.51%)

The Z-Score of 5.32 confirms strong financial health. The F-Score's low fraud probability (0.51%) is reassuring, though the high soft asset ratio (0.80) — driven by content assets — is the main contributor to the score.

Summary

#CheckResult
A1-A3Revenue QualityPass-Watch-Pass
B1-B4Expense QualityPass-Watch-Pass-Pass
C1-C4Cash Flow QualityPass-Pass-Pass-Watch
D1-D4Balance SheetFail-Pass-Pass-N/A
E1-E2M&A RiskPass-Pass
F1Beneish M-ScoreWatch

Grade: C. Should not be flagged for elimination, but investigate the content asset accounting.

Netflix is printing money — $11.0B net income, $9.5B free cash flow, 29.5% operating margin, all improving. The business is healthy and growing. But the C grade reflects genuine accounting complexity, not business weakness:

1.$32.8B in content assets (123% of equity) amortized based on subjective viewing pattern estimates — the auditor's sole critical audit matter.
2.AR growing 3x revenue — likely driven by the ad tier but worth monitoring.
3.M-Score in grey zone (-1.98) — not a manipulation signal, but not a clean bill either.

The core business is strong. The risk is in the accounting judgment embedded in the single largest asset on the balance sheet. As long as content amortization patterns hold, the numbers are fine. If viewing patterns shift materially — say, due to increased competition or subscriber churn — billions in write-downs become possible.

**Disclaimer**: This report is based on Netflix's FY2025 10-K (SEC EDGAR) and public financial data. This is NOT investment advice.

Data: SEC EDGAR 10-K (Filed 2026-01-23) + Yahoo Finance

Auditor: Ernst & Young LLP (Unqualified opinion, 1 critical audit matter)

This report is based on SEC 10-K filings and public financial data. Not investment advice.

Netflix (NFLX) 2025 — $72B WBD Acquisition, Subscriber Blackout — EarningsGrade