Spotify vs Netflix: One Growth Stock Has an Edge

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By Vandita Jadeja Published

Quick Read

  • SPOT beat EPS estimates with genuine margin expansion while NFLX's headline $5B free cash flow masked a $2.8B one-time Warner Bros. termination payment.

  • Spotify doubles down on audio with podcasts and audiobooks while Netflix sprints into GenAI filmmaking, live sports, and kids gaming simultaneously.

  • SPOT's $824M free cash flow and expanding Premium margins signal a compounding audio model, despite a 42 P/E and €410M MLC lawsuit risk.

  • Act now: the analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named his top 10 AI stocks — and Netflix didn't make the cut. Grab the names FREE today.

Spotify vs Netflix: One Growth Stock Has an Edge

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Spotify (NYSE:SPOT | SPOT Price Prediction) and Netflix (NASDAQ:NFLX) both reported Q1 2026 earnings that sent each stock lower, but for very different reasons.

Spotify beat on profit and kept stacking subscribers. Netflix posted a headline-friendly cash flow number that was mostly a one-time check from a deal it walked away from. Two subscription giants. Two very different stories about where the money is actually coming from.

Audio Profits Land. A Termination Check Pads Video.

Spotify pulled $4.53 billion in revenue, up 8.19% year over year, with EPS of $3.45 against a $2.950 consensus. Premium subscribers reached 293 million, MAUs hit 761 million, and Premium gross margin expanded from 34% to 35%.

Price hikes added €0.42 to Premium ARPU. Ad-supported revenue fell 5%, and ad gross margin slipped to 13%. New features like SongDNA, Prompted Playlist, and a Spotify integration inside ChatGPT lean into personalization.

Netflix booked $12.25 billion in revenue, up 16.19%, but EPS of $1.23 missed the $1.345 consensus. The eye-popping $5.09 billion free cash flow was inflated by a $2.80 billion termination fee from the abandoned Warner Bros. deal. The ad tier was over 60% of sign-ups in ads markets, and advertiser count grew 70% to over 4,000 clients.

An infographic titled 'Spotify vs Netflix Q1 2026 Earnings' on a black background. It is divided into three main sections: '1. The Audio Giant: Spotify (SPOT)', '2. The Video Dominant: Netflix (NFLX)', and 'Strategy & Outlook Comparison'.

The Spotify section, in green text, shows Q1 2026 EPS of $3.45 (Beat by 16.93%), Revenue of $4.53B (+8.2% YoY), Operating Income of $715M (+40.47% YoY), Net Income of $721M (+220.44% YoY) boosted by $184M Fair Value Gain, and Free Cash Flow of $824M (+54.6% YoY). It lists Premium Subscribers as 293M (+9% YoY) and MAUs as 761M (+12% YoY), with Ad-Supported Revenue of $385M (-5% YoY). Key risks include MLC Lawsuit, FX Headwind, and Ad Revenue Decline. Strategy focus is Audiobooks, Spotify Ad Exchange, and AI Personalization. The 1-Year Price Performance is -39.32%.

The Netflix section, in red text, shows Q1 2026 EPS of $1.23 (Miss by 8.55%), Revenue of $12.25B (+16.2% YoY), Operating Income of $3.957B (+18.23% YoY), Net Income of $5.28B (+82.77% YoY) inflated by a $2.80B Termination Fee, and Free Cash Flow of $5.09B (+91.44% YoY) also inflated by a Termination Fee. The AD TIER indicates >60% of Sign-ups in Ads Markets. Key risks include Content Amortization Peaks Q2 2026, Intense Competition, and FX Headwinds. Strategy focus is Live Events, Gaming (Netflix Playground), and GenAI Filmmaking Tools. 2026 Targets are Revenue: $50.7B-$51.7B, Operating Margin: 31.5%, and Ad Revenue: ~$3B. The 1-Year Price Performance is -43.84%.

The 'Strategy & Outlook Comparison' section is a table with columns for 'Lens', 'Spotify', and 'Netflix'. Rows include 'CORE BET' (Audio + Audiobooks for Spotify; Ads, Live Events, Gaming for Netflix), 'BIG RISK' (MLC Lawsuit (~€410M) for Spotify; Content Amortization Peak (Q2 2026) for Netflix), and '2026 MARGIN TARGET' (Expanding Premium Margin for Spotify; 31.5% Operating Margin for Netflix). It also mentions Q2 Operating Margin Expectation for Netflix.

The 'INVESTMENT THESIS' section provides a brief summary for Spotify ('The Cleaner Story') and Netflix ('The Reset Opportunity').
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One Tightens Focus. One Widens the Net.

Spotify is doubling down on what it already owns: audio. The Partner Program courts video podcasters, audiobooks slot into Premium bundles, and the Spotify Ad Exchange leans into biddable inventory.

Netflix is sprinting in five directions at once: GenAI filmmaking tools from acquiring InterPositive, the Netflix Playground kids gaming app, video podcasts, live boxing, and the World Baseball Classic that became its most-watched program ever in Japan.

Lens Spotify Netflix
Core Bet Audio plus audiobooks Ads, live events, gaming
Big Risk MLC lawsuit, ~€410M exposure Content amortization peaks in Q2 2026
2026 Margin Target Expanding Premium margin 31.5% operating margin

The Next Test Is Ads Becoming Real Money

Netflix guided ad revenue to roughly $3 billion in 2026, double last year. Polymarket traders see Q2 operating margin landing between 32% and 36% with 80% combined probability.

Spotify’s path is narrower: keep nudging Premium ARPU higher without losing the price-sensitive cohort and stop the ad business from leaking. I’ll be watching whether Spotify’s biddable ad rollout halts that 5% ad revenue slide before it becomes a trend.

Both stocks have been punished. SPOT is down 39.32% over one year. NFLX is down 43.84%.

Why I Lean Spotify for the Cleaner Story

For my money, Spotify’s quarter was simply cleaner. Profit growth came from real operating leverage rather than a one-time deal-breakup check. Premium margin expansion and $824 million in free cash flow tell me the audio model is finally compounding. The 42 P/E asks a lot, and the MLC lawsuit could sting, so it isn’t risk-free.

Netflix fits a different investor. If you believe ads scale toward $3 billion, live sports keep printing sign-up records, and the 31.5% margin target holds, the post-earnings drawdown reflects a meaningful reset.

A couple of clean quarters without one-time inflation would strengthen the thesis. Walking away from Warner Bros. was disciplined, but it leaves the content engine relying on its own slate at exactly the moment competition from YouTube and TikTok keeps thickening.

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About the Author Vandita Jadeja →

Vandita Jadeja is a financial copywriter who loves to read and write about stocks. She believes in buying and holding for long term gains. Her knowledge of words and numbers helps her write clear stock analysis. She has contributed to several publications, including the Joy Wallet, Benzinga, The Motley Fool and InvestorPlace.

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