Netflix Shares Fall 5.6% After Brazilian Tax Dispute Hits Quarterly Earnings

Netflix (NFLX.O) shares dropped 5.6% in after-hours trading on Tuesday after the streaming giant missed Wall Street’s third-quarter profit estimates due to an unexpected $619 million tax expense in Brazil. Despite record ad sales and a promising year-end outlook, the extra charge dragged down earnings and overshadowed otherwise steady revenue growth.

For the quarter ending in September, Netflix reported net income of $2.5 billion, or $5.87 per share, missing analyst forecasts of $3 billion and $6.97 per share, according to LSEG data. Revenue met expectations at $11.5 billion, while operating margin reached 28% — a figure that would have exceeded 31.5% without the one-off tax payment.

The setback comes as Netflix pursues growth beyond streaming through advertising and video games, competing with YouTube, Amazon Prime Video, and Disney+. Analysts said the tax issue weighed on investor sentiment, though the company’s fundamentals remain strong. “All things considered, this was another robust quarter, despite a blip due to an unforeseen expense,” said PP Foresight analyst Paolo Pescatore.

For the fourth quarter, Netflix projected revenue of $11.96 billion, slightly above Wall Street’s $11.90 billion forecast, and earnings per share of $5.45, one cent ahead of estimates.

Executives also addressed ongoing industry consolidation, saying Netflix would remain selective. Co-CEO Ted Sarandos said the company has “no interest in owning legacy media networks” but may consider acquiring intellectual property. Co-CEO Greg Peters added that competitors’ mergers would not affect Netflix’s competitive position.

The company said it delivered its strongest ad-sales quarter to date, though it did not disclose figures. Analysts believe subscription fees will continue to drive the bulk of Netflix’s growth. “Sustained revenue growth will predominantly come from subscriptions,” said eMarketer’s Ross Benes.

Netflix will end 2025 with a packed lineup, including the final season of “Stranger Things” and two live NFL games on Christmas Day. “We’re finishing the year with good momentum and an exciting Q4 slate,” the company said in its shareholder letter.