Netflix Inc. (NFLX) is dealing with some technical trouble that's worth paying attention to. The stock has now spent ten consecutive sessions below its 200-day moving average, which marks the longest such streak in more than three years. Some traders are shrugging this off as normal consolidation after a strong rally, but the charts are hinting at something potentially more concerning: a Death Cross.
If you're not steeped in technical analysis jargon, a Death Cross happens when the 50-day moving average falls below the 200-day moving average. It's one of those bearish signals that gets Wall Street's attention because it suggests momentum is shifting in a meaningful way.
Right now, Netflix is uncomfortably close to triggering that signal. The 50-day moving average is sitting at $113.57, while the 200-day is at $113.43. They're practically touching. If the selling pressure continues, that crossover could happen with the next move lower.
The Technical Picture Isn't Pretty
Netflix is currently trading around $103.05, which puts it well below several key momentum markers. The eight-day moving average is at $106.32, the 20-day at $109.15, and the 50-day at $113.57. That's a clear stair-step decline showing selling pressure building at each level.
The momentum indicators aren't offering much comfort either. The MACD (moving average convergence/divergence) indicator is sitting at a negative 2.35, and the RSI (relative strength index) has slipped to 37.64. That's getting close to oversold territory, but it's not quite signaling that sellers are exhausted yet.
Performance Has Been Bleeding Lower
Netflix is now down 17.49% over the past six months and off 6.42% in the past month. The stock has been steadily bleeding value since it peaked during summer trading. Year-to-date gains have shrunk to just 15.35%, a far cry from the leadership position Netflix once held among mega-cap tech names.
The narrative around the company has shifted too. Earlier optimism about profitability improvements and the password-sharing crackdown has given way to anxiety about slowing subscriber growth and intensifying competition in what's become an increasingly crowded streaming market.
What Traders Are Watching
For anyone actively trading Netflix, the setup right now is pretty binary. If the Death Cross confirms, it could trigger systematic selling from momentum strategies, outflows from trend-following funds, and general de-risking from hedge funds. That's the bear case.
On the flip side, bulls can point to the RSI hovering near 37 as evidence that a bounce might be coming, especially if support holds near the psychologically important $100 level.
But here's the thing: Netflix isn't moving sideways right now. It's trending down. Until the stock manages to fight its way back above those short-term moving averages, the burden of proof sits squarely with the bulls to show that this isn't just the beginning of a deeper decline.
Streaming fatigue is becoming a real concern for investors. And right now, Netflix's chart is starting to look like something out of its own horror catalog.