Reed Hastings converted 386,700 non-qualified stock options on June 1, 2026, at a price of $10.263 per share, which predates nearly everything Netflix has become. The resulting common shares were then sold on the open market in two tranches at weighted average values of $85.85 and $86.73 per share. There were about $33.2 million in gross revenues.
The transaction, which was carried out in accordance with a prearranged Rule 10b5-1 plan, was a classic exercise-and-sell: there was no urgency, no surprise, and it was completely normal, much like big CEO compensation events that are planned months in advance. It was noteworthy because of the situation. Hastings formally stepped down from Netflix’s board of directors three days later on June 4 during the company’s annual shareholder meeting.
Together, the sales of stock in May and June came to over $71 million. That is a substantial amount of money. Additionally, it is a rather small reallocation when compared to the size of what Hastings still owns through the Hastings-Quillin Family Trust, which consists of about 21.16 million shares owned indirectly. His direct personal holdings were reduced by nearly 99% to just 3,940 shares after the June 1 transaction. For those particular shares, it is theoretically correct to frame this as a withdrawal from Netflix. It’s not the frame he’s separating from Netflix’s performance. A family trust with twenty-one million shares does not indicate a lack of concern for the stock price.
The market reacted more sharply than many observers anticipated when Hastings announced in April that he would not run for reelection. On April 17, after-hours trading saw NFLX drop roughly 9 to 10 percent. That same evening, the business disclosed Q1 revenue of $12.25 billion, a 16 percent year-over-year gain that exceeded forecasts. Warner Bros.’ $2.8 billion one-time termination fee, which boosted the headline figure, complicated the revenue beat.
More importantly, Wall Street’s $12.64 billion projection was marginally exceeded by Q2 forecast of $12.57 billion. Investors reportedly chose to view both the founder’s resignation and the guidance shortfall as reasons to sell, which caused the price to plummet quickly. LightShed Partners’ Rich Greenfield openly acknowledged that investors were worried about the leadership void at the board level, where Hastings had continued to serve as Executive Chairman, rather than at the operations level, where Greg Peters and Ted Sarandos had been co-CEOs since 2023.
The next chairman is Jay Hoag, a founding general partner at Technology Crossover Ventures and a member of Netflix’s board since 1999. Hoag has a significant institutional memory of Netflix because he was an early investor in the company when it was still a DVD-by-mail business with a small footprint. It’s still unclear if investors who took solace in Hastings’ presence as a founding voice are reassured by that continuity. In the days after the news, the Erste Group Bank downgraded NFLX from “Buy” to “Hold” due to increased uncertainty around board leadership. Over the previous 12 months, the stock has decreased by almost 16%.
According to Netflix’s official communications, Hastings stated he was leaving to concentrate on philanthropy and other endeavors, including taking care of a ski lodge he owns in Utah. Reading the series of events—the co-CEO transfer in 2023, the official board chair designation that followed, and now the complete departure—gives the impression that this was a planned and orderly resignation carried out over a number of years rather than an abrupt retreat.

The sales of the options were planned in advance. Alongside the quarterly results, the board decision was made public. The mechanism was as tidy as they get. What’s left is the business, the trust shares, and the question of whether Netflix will do well enough in the coming years to support the framework it established under Hastings’ leadership.
