The Mercury News Weekend

Netflix profit soars as entertainm­ent needs shift

- By Michael Liedtke and Tali Arbel The Associated Press

Netflix added a flood of new subscriber­s amid the coronaviru­s pandemic and also offered clues to a possible successor for founding CEO Reed Hastings, who on Thursday named the company’s chief content officer, Ted Sarandos, as co-CEO.

The Los Gatos company’s extraordin­ary expansion helped Netflix earn $720 million on revenue of $6.15 billion during the second quarter.

Investors have been betting the pandemic will make Netflix more popular than ever. Since public health experts officially declared the pandemic on March 11, Netflix’s stock has soared by 50%.

The company picked up 10.1 million worldwide subscriber­s during the April

June period, more than triple what it usually adds.

The increase announced Thursday with Netflix’s earnings eclipsed the gain of 8.3 million subscriber­s projected among analysts polled by FactSet. Netflix ended June with 193 million worldwide subscriber­s, including 70 million in the U.S. and Canada, its largest geographic market.

Nearly 26 million of those subscriber­s have joined Netflix during the first six months of this year — more than double the number compared with last year — as the pandemic curtailed travel and even nights out on the town. The restrictio­ns have turned out to be a boon for Netflix, which also faces a slew of new streaming competitor­s.

Netflix, however, said its subscriber growth has begun to slow after it added

just 2 million fewer customers in the past six months as it did for all of 2019. It forecasts just 2.5 million new additions for the current quarter.

The pandemic has shut down Hollywood, limiting the ability of TV and movie studios to produce more entertainm­ent to feed Netflix and other video streaming services.

That could limit their appeal if viewers run out of new things to watch. Netflix said Thursday that it is slowly resuming production, mostly in Asia and Europe, and its 2020 lineup remains intact. Shooting delays mean big shows and movies slated for next year will come out more in the second half of 2021.

People spending more time at home due to the pandemic has “massively accelerate­d the shift” from traditiona­l TV to streaming video,” said eMarketer analyst Eric Haggstrom in an email. That bodes well for Netflix, the streaming pioneer.

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