Roku Inc. (ROKU) shares climbed Friday, catching momentum from Netflix Inc.'s (NFLX) jaw-dropping $82.7 billion acquisition of Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD). The streaming platform operator ended the session up 5.87% at $100.09, and the reasons behind the move tell an interesting story about who really wins in the streaming wars.
The Aggregator Advantage
Here's the thing: when Netflix absorbs massive franchises like Harry Potter and the DC Universe to keep subscribers from jumping ship, someone still controls the actual battlefield. That someone is Roku.
The merger amplifies what analysts call the aggregator thesis. As streaming giants fight for viewer attention and wallet share, they're all fighting on TV operating systems. Roku doesn't create content or worry about which show will be the next hit. It just operates the gateway everyone has to pass through, and that's looking pretty attractive right now.
A beefed-up, content-rich Netflix means more people glued to their screens, which translates directly into higher engagement on Roku devices. And more engagement means more opportunities for Roku's high-margin video advertising business to print money.
Stability Amid Merger Chaos
The timing matters too. While Netflix and Warner Bros. Discovery face a treacherous path through Washington dealing with antitrust scrutiny and objections from rivals like Paramount Skydance, Roku remains a pure infrastructure play. It's Switzerland in the streaming content wars.
Roku's recent third-quarter performance backs this up. The company reported $1.2 billion in revenue, beating estimates, along with a 17% jump in platform revenue and positive operating income. Management has charted a path to profitability by 2026, giving investors a way to ride the streaming boom without the regulatory headaches or integration nightmares plaguing content studios trying to merge.
Technical Picture and Momentum
Market data shows strong momentum backing the rally. Benzinga Edge assigned the stock a Momentum score of 74.62, reflecting bullish sentiment.
From a technical standpoint, Roku is trading about 1.4% above its 50-day moving average, suggesting short-term strength. The wrinkle is that shares remain roughly 18.3% below the 200-day moving average, which indicates the longer-term trend is still recovering. This divergence between short-term and long-term averages suggests the stock might be in a transitional phase, with near-term momentum fighting against a broader recovery story.
For investors, Roku represents a different angle on the streaming revolution. You're not betting on whether the next superhero franchise will land or whether regulators will block a massive content merger. You're betting that regardless of who owns what content, people will keep streaming it, and someone needs to own the pipes. Right now, that someone is having a pretty good Friday.