The Week (US)

Why Netflix is raising its prices

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It’s going to cost you more to watch the new season of said Snider in USA Today. Netflix announced last week that it is raising the cost of its most popular packages—its first price hike since 2015. The monthly cost of the streaming giant’s standard service, which allows users to stream movies and TV shows on up to two screens at once, will climb $1, to $10.99 per month, while the premium package, which allows viewing on up to four screens, will increase $2, to $13.99. Price increases have been a sensitive subject for Netflix, ever since a poorly explained hike in 2011 resulted in 800,000 cancellati­ons. But this one will help “finance a critically acclaimed slate of original programmin­g,” said Jillian Harding in CBSNews.com. Netflix plans to spend $6 billion producing and licensing content this year, and has budgeted another $7 billion for 2018. All that cash has so far produced impressive results: Its roster of more than 200 original production­s, including The Crown, Master of None, and Orange Is the New Black, helped it “land more Emmy award nomination­s than any TV network besides HBO this year.” And its U.S. audience has more than doubled, to 53 million, since the February 2013 debut of House of Cards.

Netflix needs original content in part because its catalog of outside movies and TV shows is set to shrink, said Brooks Barnes and John Koblin in The New York Times. Disney announced in August that it plans to launch its own streaming services in 2019, and as a result, “Disney, Pixar, Marvel, and Lucasfilm movies will eventually disappear from Netflix.” That’s prompted Netflix to plow money into kids’ content, including a deal with DreamWorks Animation for 300 hours of new children’s programmin­g. Meanwhile, Hulu is emerging as a credible Netflix rival, thanks to its strategy of “snapping up reruns” of popular TV shows, said Lucas Shaw and Gerry Smith in Bloomberg.com. This year, Hulu, which is owned by Disney, Comcast, Fox, and Time Warner, spent about $2.5 billion to acquire more than 3,000 episodes of current and former TV shows, including ABC’s Black-ish and NBC’s 30 Rock. It also surprised the industry by beating Netflix in a bidding war for NBC’s blockbuste­r series This Is Us, forking out $3.5 million per episode for rights.

The question is, how many streaming services are consumers willing to pay for? asked Brian Fung in The Washington Post. It used to be that cord cutters could subscribe to one or two streaming sites and get a vast array of TV and movie choices for far less than the cost of a cable bundle. But as more companies enter the market with their own offerings, from Disney to Apple to Viacom, and existing streamers “keep adding features and original video,” consumers might need to subscribe to four or five—or more—sites to get the content they want. That could pose a real dilemma for potential cord cutters: “At a certain point, the cost of an internet plan plus various streaming services equals the price of the traditiona­l TV bundle.” As the war heats up, it makes sense for streaming companies to keep adding new content to hook subscriber­s—“which appears to be exactly what Netflix is doing.”

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