Netflix dropped 11% at the open Friday, erasing roughly $100 billion in market value in a single session. The trigger was not a collapse in the business. It was a third-quarter revenue guidance figure of $12.86 billion that came in approximately $140 million below what Wall Street had been expecting. To put that in proportion, the guidance miss that wiped out $100 billion in shareholder value represented barely 1% of the number analysts had modeled.
The second-quarter results themselves were solid by any conventional standard. Revenue grew 13.4% year over year to $12.56 billion. Earnings per share of $0.80 beat the $0.79 consensus estimate. Net income reached $3.4 billion. Subscribers streamed more than 97 billion hours of content in the first half of 2026, up nearly 2% from the prior year. The advertising business is on track to generate approximately $3 billion in full-year revenue, nearly double last year’s figure.
None of it mattered. The stock opened at its lowest level in over a year, down 46% from its 52-week high, trading at roughly 18 times forward earnings with a PEG ratio below 1.0. By most traditional valuation frameworks, Netflix now looks undervalued relative to its growth rate. The market does not care. It is punishing the guidance, not the business.
The Pattern That Should Concern Every Large Cap Investor
This is now the second time in 48 hours that a dominant technology company has posted strong results and been met with aggressive selling. Earlier this week, TSMC reported 77% annual earnings growth and fell 4%. Broadcom beat estimates last month and dropped 15%. SK Hynix debuted on Nasdaq with a 13% pop and gave it all back the next day.
The common thread connecting all of these moves is not deteriorating fundamentals. It is elevated expectations meeting reality. When stocks are priced for perfection across an entire sector, even slight misses on forward guidance trigger outsized reactions because the margin for error has been completely compressed out of the valuation. Netflix guided Q3 revenue 1% below consensus and lost 11%. That math only works when the stock was priced as though every quarter would exceed expectations indefinitely.
Where the Capital Is Going
The more important story for investors is not what Netflix lost on Friday. It is where the money leaving these positions is landing. Yesterday, eight of eleven S&P 500 sectors finished positive while technology, communications, and consumer discretionary fell. Consumer Staples gained 2.9%. Healthcare rallied. REITs outperformed. The Russell 2000 was green while the Nasdaq dropped more than 1%.
That pattern has now repeated for three consecutive sessions. Capital is not leaving the equity market. It is leaving the most crowded, most expensive positions in the market and rotating into sectors and market cap segments where valuations have not been stretched to the point where a 1% guidance miss destroys $100 billion in value.
For companies in the sub-$2 billion market cap space, this dynamic is the investment case in real time. Smaller companies with reasonable multiples, growing earnings, and domestic revenue exposure do not carry the same expectation burden that is currently crushing the largest names in technology and media. When a Netflix or TSMC sells off on strong results because the price already assumed perfection, the relative attractiveness of companies that never priced in perfection to begin with becomes considerably harder to ignore.
The market is not punishing bad businesses. It is punishing expensive ones. That distinction is everything right now.