The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Netflix selling $2 billion in bonds as battle for content intensifie­s

Company burned through $551 million in the third quarter.

- By Molly Smith, Elizabeth Rembert

Netflix is selling bonds as it continues to bolster its original content in the face of expanding competitio­n.

The company is offering around $2 billion of bonds between dollars and euros, according to a statement Monday. The proceeds of the sale will be used for general corporate purposes, which may include content acquisitio­ns, production and developmen­t and potential acquisitio­ns.

The dollar-denominate­d 10½year bonds, which can’t be bought back, may yield around 5%, while the euro notes could pay in the high 3% range, according to people with knowledge of the matter, who asked not to be identified as the details are private. Given Netflix’s current trading levels, it could realize a blended coupon rate of less than 4.25%, according to Bloomberg Intelligen­ce analyst Stephen Flynn.

Netflix is issuing debt after reporting earnings that beat analyst estimates and saw overseas growth that helped sooth investors’ concerns about a slowdown at home. The company burned through $551 million in the third quarter and is “slowly” moving toward becoming free cash flow positive, Chief Executive Officer Reed Hastings said in a letter to shareholde­rs last week. In the meantime, Netflix will continue to tap the high-yield market for its investment needs, he said.

The Los Gatos, California-based company reiterated expectatio­ns to burn through $3.5 billion in cash this year as the war for content heats up. It’s been raising prices — often at the expense of subscriber gains — in some of its largest territorie­s, trying to shift toward profitabil­ity as streaming service competitio­n mounts from companies such as Walt Disney Co., AT&T Inc. and Apple Inc.

Netflix has historical­ly relied on

the high-yield bond market to finance its growth, typically issuing debt following its first- and third-quarter earnings in April and October, respective­ly. Its debt load, including operating lease liabilitie­s, has steadily grown to around $13.5 billion since first tapping the market in 2009, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

The company last borrowed $2.24 billion of junk bonds in April, and said that it would reduce its reliance on debt financing at the time. CEO Hastings walked back that language in a July letter to shareholde­rs, saying Netflix planned to still use the high-yield market to fund content investment­s.

Netflix’s shares and bonds were little changed in early trading in New York. The stock opened at around $276 Monday.

Morgan Stanley, Goldman

Sachs Group Inc., JPMorgan Chase & Co., Deutsche Bank AG and Wells Fargo & Co. are managing the bond sale, according to a separate person with knowledge of the matter. The notes are expected to price today, the person said, asking not to be identified as the details are private.

 ?? DREAMSTIME ?? Netflix is issuing debt after reporting earnings that beat analyst estimates and saw overseas growth that helped sooth investors’ concerns about a slowdown at home.
DREAMSTIME Netflix is issuing debt after reporting earnings that beat analyst estimates and saw overseas growth that helped sooth investors’ concerns about a slowdown at home.

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