Global Times

STILL ON TOP

▶ Netflix keeps growing in pandemic, passes 200m subscriber­s

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Netflix on Tuesday topped subscriber growth expectatio­ns in the past quarter, keeping ahead of new streaming rivals competing for viewers stuck in their homes during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The streaming television leader added some 8.5 million paid subscriber­s in the quarter to reach 203 million, topping 200 million despite recent price hikes, its quarterly earning update showed.

“COVID- 19 has accelerate­d that big shift from linear to streaming entertainm­ent,” Netflix chief financial officer Spencer Neumann said on an earnings call.

“So, the underlying long- term looks good.”

The company’s cash flow was so strong that it will no longer borrow money to pay for operations, and is considerin­g starting to buy back shares, according to a letter to investors.

Netflix shares jumped more than 12 percent in after- market trades following the release.

Profits dipped to $ 542 million in the fourth quarter, compared with $ 587 million in the same period in 2019. But overall revenue in the quarter surged 21.5 percent to $ 6.6 billion.

For the full year, Netflix added a record 37 million paid membership­s, according to the earnings report.

“We’re enormously grateful that in these uniquely challengin­g times we’ve been able to provide our members around the world with a source of escape, connection and joy while continuing to build our business,” Netflix said in a letter to investors.

Paid membership increased 23 percent in the final quarter of 2020 when compared with the same period a year earlier, but average revenue per membership was flat, according to the Silicon Valley- based company.

While Netflix raised rates slightly in the US late in 2020, the majority – some 83 percent – of its new subscriber­s were from outside North America, the earnings report indicated.

Films to launch

Netflix has invested heavily in original shows and films to make itself a must- have service in the increasing­ly competitiv­e streaming market.

“It’s super impressive what Disney has done,” Netflix chief executive Reed Hastings said on the call.

“It is going to be great for the world that Disney and Netflix are competing show by show, movie by movie.”

While Apple, Comcast, Disney and others have fielded streaming services, Netflix thus far “has been a clear winner,” according to eMarketer analyst Eric Haggstrom.

Netflix executives said their production­s are back up and running in most regions after being derailed by the pandemic.

Netflix boasted having more than 500 titles in post- production or being readied for release on the service, with the plan being to launch at least one new original film weekly.

Already the master of the pandemic- era movie landscape, Netflix last week offered a preview of upcoming oming 2021 releases, a list with no o fewer than 70 star- studded feature ture films.

From m drama, comedy and science e fiction to horror and even Westerns, ns, the slate will take in every major jor film genre before the year is out, with some releases poised as potential competitio­n for r major awards.

Among ong the most- anticipate­d titles is Don’t Look

Up, from m filmmaker Adam McKay of The Big Short and Vice ce fame and starring award- winning actor Leonardo DiCaprio. iCaprio.

The Harder They Fall, a Western n co- produced by

Jay- Z and nd with a primarily black k cast including Regina King and Idris Elba, also lso promises to be one to look out for.

The announceme­nt – via a brochure re on the streamer’s er’s website

– was accompanie­d by a short ort video presented ted by Wonder Woman man star Gal

Gadot, Jumanji lead Dwayne e Johnson and

Deadpool ool actor Ryan Reynolds. ds.

Johnson, nson, Gadot and Reynolds ynolds will appear in Red Notice, an action film with th a $ 160 million n budget, according ng to US media.

 ?? Photo: IC ?? Gal Gadot
Photo: IC Gal Gadot

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