Netflix's acquisition is drawing scrutiny from investors.
Netflix will need to take on a ton of debt to finance this transaction.
Netflix (NASDAQ: NFLX) has been one of the best investment stories this century. It has delivered impressive shareholder returns since its 2002 IPO, but it has run into a bit of trouble lately. The stock is trading down about 43% from its July 2025 all-time high, and its recent performance prompts an obvious question: Should investors buy the dip?
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Netflix's stock has tanked largely on investor concern about its efforts to acquire multiple media assets from Warner Bros. Discovery (NASDAQ: WBD). The acquisition transaction will cost Netflix a whopping $82.7 billion. This is structured as an all-cash transaction, which means Netflix, which has about $9 billion in cash and short-term investments on hand, will need to take on a substantial amount of debt to finance the deal.
That level of debt has investors a bit worried about the health of Netflix. It's not yet clear how these assets will be integrated into Netflix's services, and Warner Bros. Discovery apparently didn't think enough of them to spin them off into a stand-alone company (which is why Netflix is attempting to purchase them). However, Netflix has an excellent track record of maximizing the value of the assets it owns and creates, and I think this acquisition makes sense, though it may take some time for it to absorb the initial cost.
But back to the main question: Is this 40% share price drop a buying opportunity? Before the drop, Netflix's valuation was rather expensive, with the stock trading for more than 60 times trailing earnings and nearly 50 times forward earnings.

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At that stock valuation, Netflix as a company should have been growing at an unbelievable pace, but its revenue growth was only in the mid-teens. Now, that's solid growth, but I think that's far too expensive a price to pay for the stock, especially when there are artificial intelligence companies that are growing at 50% or greater and trade for a cheaper price tag.
Today, Netflix trades at about the same valuation as its big tech peers. As a result, I think it's a viable stock to buy now if you think that Netflix can integrate the assets from the acquisition appropriately. If it can't, then it could take a while for Netflix to dig itself out of the hole. But if it can, then Netflix looks like an excellent value here.
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Keithen Drury has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Netflix and Warner Bros. Discovery. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.