Still, many analysts and investors see the risks as manageable. Risk premiums on the company’s debt are little changed over the last week. On Monday, Moody’s affirmed Netflix’s A3 rating, citing the company’s strong operating performance and benefits it will gain from acquiring “some of the most highly regarded intellectual property in the media industry,” including Harry Potter, HBO and DC Comics. The ratings agency changed its outlook on the company to “stable” from “positive,” reflecting a slight increase in risk for the company from the acquisition.
According to Bloomberg Intelligence calculations, Netflix would have about $75 billion in debt if the acquisition goes through based on the latest terms, up from about $15 billion now. But even with much higher debt, the new company is expected next year to generate around $20.4 billion of earnings available to pay interest, known as earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization.
At that level, net debt would equal about 3.7 times Ebitda. Then in 2027, earnings would probably grow and bring the leverage ratio down to about mid-2x range, according to BI, a more typical level for an investment-grade company.
“Overall, Netflix is a very, very strong credit,” BI’s Flynn said. “They’ve got growing revenue, growing Ebitda, and growing free cash flow, so the pro-forma company can de-lever quite quickly.”
Netflix’s swelling debt load recalls the company’s heavy borrowing before the pandemic, with a key difference: the streaming giant is much stronger now. Netflix first started selling junk bonds in 2009 when it was transitioning from mainly renting DVDs through the mail into a streaming company. Over the following years its debt load climbed to as high as $18.5 billion as it gained more rights to stream movies and television programs, and started producing hits like “House of Cards” and “Stranger Things.”
Some detractors called the company “Debtflix” as it piled on the liabilities. But then its investments came to look prescient. The global pandemic hit in 2020, and vast amounts of cash flowed into its coffers as people worldwide found themselves homebound in lockdown, desperate for entertainment. Netflix had a backlog of series and movies to release that proved even more valuable than the company had expected.
In 2023, the company started generating more than $6.9 billion of free cash flow every year. Bond raters upgraded it to investment grade status, allowing it to finance itself at a cheaper cost at a time when it needed less debt funding.
“Netflix has earned the right to take on an acquisition of this size,” said Jim Fitzpatrick, head of US investment-grade credit research at Allspring Global. “Their balance sheet has plenty of capacity to accommodate something like this, even if they have to up their bid.”


Comments are closed, but trackbacks and pingbacks are open.