San Francisco Chronicle

Netflix: Slow subscriber growth hits shares

- By Michael Liedtke

Netflix’s video streaming service suffered a dramatic slowdown in growth during its traditiona­lly sluggish spring season, a dropoff coming as the company boosts its prices and girds for even stiffer competitio­n.

The service picked up 2.7 million worldwide subscriber­s for the AprilJune period. That’s far below Netflix’s forecast of 5 million subscriber­s. The secondquar­ter letdown announced Wednesday comes after Netflix attracted nearly 10 million subscriber­s during the first three months of the year , more than any other quarter since the debut of its video streaming service 12 years ago.

The slowdown rattled investors already wondering how Netflix might fare against a new wave of competitio­n coming this fall when both Walt Disney Co. and Apple plan to launch their own video streaming services.

Netflix shares, which closed at $362.44, plunged more than 12% in afterhours trading. If that decrease is replicated in Thursday’s regular trading session, it will be the largest decline in Netflix’s stock price in three years and wipe out $18 billion in shareholde­r wealth.

The Los Gatos company ended June with 151.6 million worldwide subscriber­s, far more than a current crop of video streaming rivals that includes as Amazon and Hulu.

Signaling it expects to regain some momentum this summer, the company projected it will add 7 million subscriber­s from July through September. The optimism stems in part from the immense popularity of “Stranger Things,” whose third season attracted record viewership after its July 4 release.

But the battle for viewers’ attention and dollars is about to get much tougher. Besides the Disney and Apple, AT&T will also join the fray next year with HBO Max and NBC is expanding into video streaming, too.

“The competitio­n for winning consumers’ relaxation time is fierce for all companies and great for consumers,” Netflix said in a letter to shareholde­rs.

It traced the secondquar­ter’s slow subscriber growth primarily to a recent round of prices increase, including hikes of 13% to 18% for customers in the United States, its biggest market. That pushed the price of its most popular U.S. plan to $13 per month, testing the bounds of how much some consumers are willing to pay for a service that started out at $8 per month for the same level of service. Disney is already planning to undercut Netflix by charging just $7 per month for its new service.

Some U.S. households decided Netflix is no longer worth it at the higher price, causing the company to end June with 120,000 fewer subscriber­s in the country than it had at the end of March.

The increasing­ly crowded video streaming field has led to questions whether Netflix will be able to maintain the rapid rate of subscriber growth that has made its stock as one of Wall Street’s premier performers during the past decade.

A $10,000 investment in Netflix at the end of 2009 would have been worth $460,000 at the end of Wednesday’s regular trading session.

It also needs more customers to help cover the costs of all the exclusive TV series and movies that it keeps adding to its lineup to stand out for the rest of the crowd. The company has been borrowing heavily to finance a highly acclaimed slate of programmin­g that garnered 117 Emmy nomination­s, second only to HBO’s 137 nomination­s among all networks.

Selling ads would help Netflix bring in more revenue, but its management reiterated Wednesday that the service will continue to remain commercial free.

Netflix is still burning through more cash than it is bringing in. In the second quarter, it registered a negative cash flow of $594 million and expects to accumulate a negative cash flow of $3.5 billion for the entire year.

Part of that outgoing money will go toward the developmen­t of more original shows to replace some of the programmin­g that it has been licensing from Disney, AT&T and NBC, all of which are reclaiming the rights for their own streaming services. The losses include “Friends” and “The Office,” longdefunc­t series that still remain among the mostwatche­d shows on Netflix.

But it still posts profits because of the way entertainm­ent companies are allowed to account for their programmin­g costs. In the most recent quarter, Netflix earned nearly $271 million, a 30% drop from the same time last year but more than Wall Street was expecting. Revenue climbed 26% from last year to $4.9 billion.

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 ?? Alastair Pike / AFP / Getty Images ?? Netflix shares plunged more than 12% in afterhours trading on reports of slowing growth.
Alastair Pike / AFP / Getty Images Netflix shares plunged more than 12% in afterhours trading on reports of slowing growth.

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