Vancouver Sun

Netflix shares exceed US$400 for first time as bulls lift price targets

Wall Street expects streaming service to continue to grow in subscriber­s, scale

- BRAD OLESEN AND KAMARON LEACH

NEW YORK Netflix bulls were on parade Tuesday — in tune with the machine-like upward trajectory of the video streaming company’s shares, which have doubled since the beginning of the year.

Wall Street is getting more bullish on Netflix as streaming capabiliti­es become an ever bigger part of the global media landscape. GBH Insights analyst Dan Ives raised his price target on Netflix to a Street-high US$500, only days after Goldman Sachs set what had been the previous high at US$490.

Ives sees stronger-than-expected subscriber growth this year and a potential benefit to Netflix if a bidding war between Comcast and Walt Disney drives Twenty-First Century Fox Inc. to break up some assets.

Netflix was among the top gainers in the S&P 500 Index on Tuesday, even as concern about an expanding trade war with China dragged the benchmark lower for a third day.

The stock climbed as much as three per cent Tuesday and crossed US$400 apiece for the first time, putting it on pace to reach yet another record close. Netflix carries an average price target of US$340, an 18-per-cent discount to Tuesday’s record high.

“The combinatio­n of engaging new content, momentum in overseas markets and a business model that scales globally increasing­ly sets Netflix apart from its legacy competitor­s,” wrote Monness Crespi analyst Brian White in a note Tuesday. White, lifting his price target to US$460, expects the market to reward Netflix with higher price-to-earnings multiples as “global content is paving the way.”

As Netflix continues to invest in itself, coupled with other strategic initiative­s such as a joint venture in the U.K., Wall Street anticipate­s continued growth in subscriber­s and scale. Piper Jaffray analyst Michael Olson, who raised his price target to US$420, expects subscriber growth in Netflix’s internatio­nal segment to exceed the Wall Street consensus in the second quarter.

 ?? JUSTIN SULLIVAN/GETTY IMAGES ?? Wall Street is getting more bullish on Netflix as streaming capabiliti­es become a bigger part of the global media landscape. The firm’s shares have doubled since the start of the year.
JUSTIN SULLIVAN/GETTY IMAGES Wall Street is getting more bullish on Netflix as streaming capabiliti­es become a bigger part of the global media landscape. The firm’s shares have doubled since the start of the year.

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