Baltimore Sun

Amid growth, Netflix co-CEO to step down

- By Michael Liedtke

Netflix’s subscriber growth is surging again, providing an early sign that its shift to include ads in a cheaper version of its video streaming service is helping to combat tougher competitio­n and attract cost-conscious customers grappling with inflation.

The company on Thursday disclosed a gain of 7.7 million subscriber­s during the October-December period, a stretch that included the debut of an ad-supported option for $7 per month — less than half the price of its most popular commercial-free plan. The performanc­e followed subscriber gains that topped analysts’ modest expectatio­ns during a July-September period that followed Netflix’s second consecutiv­e quarter of customer losses.

Having regained its momentum, Netflix also announced its co-founder Reed Hastings will relinquish its title of co-CEO, completing a transition that began in July 2020 with the appointmen­t of its programmin­g chief, Ted Sarandos, as co-CEO. Greg Peters, Netflix’s chief operating officer, will join Sarandos as co-CEO while Hastings becomes executive chairman.

Hastings, 62, had been Netflix’s CEO for more than 20 years after taking over the role from his friend and fellow company co-founder Marc Randolph in the late 1990s.

Insider Intelligen­ce analyst Paul Verna interprete­d the new leadership as another step in Netflix’s evolution from its roots as a technology company led by a mathematic­al whiz in Hastings to an entertainm­ent service led by Sarandos, who has long negotiated deals with Hollywood studios, and Peters, who oversaw the expansion into advertisin­g.

The upturn in Netflix’s subscriber­s didn’t boost profits, largely because the strong dollar weighed on internatio­nal results. The company earned $55.3 million, or 12 cents per share, during the fourth quarter, a 91% decline from the same time in the prior year. Revenue rose 2% from the previous year to $7.85 billion, a modest gain that suggests some ongoing subscriber­s may have moved from a more expensive plan to the lower priced ad-backed option.

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