Los Angeles Times

Millions stream to Netflix

Shares soar on solid profit and subscriber growth, fueled by original content and overseas adoption.

- By David Ng david.ng@latimes.com

Netflix easily blew past subscripti­on expectatio­ns for the fourth quarter of 2017 on the back of solid earnings and revenue, sending shares of the streaming entertainm­ent giant up more than 8% in after-hours trading Monday.

Los Gatos, Calif.-based Netflix added 8.3 million subscriber­s globally during the period, beating its own guidance of 6.3 million. The company met its earnings forecast of 41 cents per share on slightly higher-than-expected revenue of $3.29 billion.

Wall Street had expected earnings of 41 cents per share on revenue of $3.28 billion, according to analysts polled by Factset.

For the year, Netflix said it added 24 million new membership­s, compared with 19 million in 2016. The company reported full-year 2017 revenue of $11.69 billion, up from $8.83 billion in the previous year. Net income jumped to $558.9 million, up from $186.7 million.

Netflix said that 8.3 million new subscriber­s was a quarterly high for the company.

Subscriber growth was fueled largely by original content as well as wider adoption of streaming TV overseas.

The quarter saw the Dec. 22 release of Netflix’s highly touted movie “Bright,” starring Will Smith as a cop living in a dystopian L.A., where humans work alongside orcs and fairies. The film, which reportedly cost at least $90 million, has been popular among subscriber­s despite scathing reviews. Netflix has ordered a sequel.

Netflix also debuted the second season of “Stranger Things” on Oct. 27. Other shows to drop during the period include new seasons of “Black Mirror” and “The Crown.”

During the quarter, Netflix increased its subscripti­on prices. The price for a standard monthly subscripti­on rose by $1, to $10.99, while the premium rate rose $2, to $13.99.

Subscriber­s spent more time watching Netf lix in 2017, with average streaming hours per membership rising by 9% year over year.

Netflix projects it will spend $7.5 billion to $8 billion on content in 2018, up from $6 billion in 2017. The company’s heavy spending has meant that it has had to borrow billions of dollars.

For the fourth quarter, Netflix’s content obligation­s — current and future costs for content production, acquisitio­n and licensing — reached $17.7 billion.

The streaming giant said Monday that it took a $39million noncash charge in the fourth quarter for “unreleased content we’ve decided not to move forward with.” It didn’t elaborate on the unreleased content. During the quarter, Netflix announced that it would not release a Kevin Spacey movie in which the actor plays Gore Vidal.

Netflix also halted production of the sixth season of “House of Cards” after news about Spacey’s alleged misconduct surfaced.

An $8-billion annual content spend would put Netf lix well ahead of rivals Amazon, Hulu and HBO.

But Netflix will face fresh competitio­n from Walt Disney Co., which is expected to launch its own streaming services in 2019. Disney’s acquisitio­n of most of 21st Century Fox means that its new entertainm­ent service will probably feature movies and TV shows from both Disney’s and Fox’s vast libraries.

Netflix shares closed at $227.58, up $7.12, or 3.2%.

 ?? Matt Kennedy Netf lix ?? WILL SMITH, left, and Joel Edgerton star in “Bright,” a Netflix film released last month. A sequel is planned.
Matt Kennedy Netf lix WILL SMITH, left, and Joel Edgerton star in “Bright,” a Netflix film released last month. A sequel is planned.

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