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						Netflix CEO Hastings says no plans for cheaper India 
						offerings
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		 [November 10, 2018] 
		 By Jonathan Weber 
 SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Netflix <NFLX.O> 
		chief executive Reed Hastings said that the streaming video company had 
		no plans for cheaper prices in the hotly competitive India market and 
		that an executive's comments suggesting otherwise had been 
		"misunderstood."
 
 In an interview with Reuters on Friday, Hastings noted that Netflix had 
		three price tiers in India: 500 rupees ($6.90) for a basic plan, 650 
		($9.00) for a standard plan and 800 rupees ($11) for premium. Those 
		prices are only modestly lower than what the company charges in the 
		United States.
 
 But in India, Hastings said, "we see the typical mix across these three 
		plans that we see in many other countries like the U.S., which would 
		indicate that we don’t have a pricing issue. Because if it was, everyone 
		would be on the lower price plan.”
 
 When asked directly if that meant the company had no plans for lower 
		prices in India, he said: "Correct."
 
 Hastings' comments followed a Singapore event where the company 
		introduced 17 new original productions for Asia, including nine for 
		India. He said local production was a key driver of new subscribers in 
		India and elsewhere, but he declined to provide specific figures on Asia 
		subscriber numbers and growth.
 
 Netflix launched in India two years ago and has won fans among a young, 
		tech-savvy middle class in a country where video consumption of all 
		kinds is soaring. It scored a big hit in July with the release of 
		“Sacred Games”, a hard-boiled thriller built around Bollywood star Saif 
		Ali Khan.
 
 
		
		 
		Local industry players, however, say Netflix’s prices will make it hard 
		to compete against domestic competitors like 21st Century Fox-backed 
		Hotstar <DIS.N>, Amazon's <AMZN.O> Prime Video and satellite TV provider 
		Tata Sky.
 
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But Hastings said Netflix could still thrive amid cheaper options.
 “Now it is true that Youtube is free, and Amazon is basically free, and cable is 
extremely inexpensive because it’s ad-supported. To some degree that creates a 
consumer expectation," he said. But he added that the cost of Netflix in India 
was "like going to the movie theater 2-3 tickets a month, but you get to watch a 
lot more.”
 
 
 
PRICING EXPERIMENTS
 
 Following Netflix's October earnings announcement, chief product officer Greg 
Peters said: "We’ll experiment with other pricing models, not only for India, 
but around the world that will allow us to broaden access by providing a pricing 
tier that sits below our current lowest tier."
 
 That was widely understood to signal that a low-price plan was coming to India. 
But Hastings said that was not the case.
 
 "It got misunderstood as a decision that we are going to have lower prices in 
India, which is not something we are particularly contemplating," he said.
 
 Hastings acknowledged the limitations of the current pricing strategy in a 
country where per-capita income is a tenth of that in the United States.
 
 “It’s true that if you’re trying to get to a billion households, that probably 
wouldn’t work," he said. "But if you’re focused on English-language, 
English-entertainment households, there is a much higher income.”
 
 He called the high-end focus "a practical, realistic" place to start and that 
the company eventually hoped to target a broader audience.
 
 Netflix currently has more than 130 million subscribers worldwide. Hastings has 
said the India market could deliver the next 100 million subscribers.
 
 (Reporting by Jonathan Weber; Editing by Nick Macfie)
 
				 
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