Shares of the online video pioneer, trading close to an all-time
high at $530.79 on Friday, have jumped more than 75% since
mid-March, when governments around the world imposed
stay-at-home orders to help slow the spread of the novel
coronavirus. During the same time, the S&P 500 has gained 44.8%.
In July, Netflix forecast it would add 2.5 million new paid
streaming customers globally between July and September, based
on the expectation that its strong first-half performance - in
which it added almost 26 million subscribers - likely pulled
forward some demand from the second half of the year.
Analysts have been more optimistic, citing stronger Netflix
content in the quarter and the fact that many people are still
staying home because of the pandemic. As of Oct. 18 they
projected 3.4 million new subscribers, according to IBES data
from Refinitiv.
Hurdles for Netflix in the third quarter included the return of
live sports, the easing of restrictions in some economies, and
competition from Comcast Corp-owned NBCUniversal streaming
service Peacock and AT&T-owned WarnerMedia’s streaming entry,
HBO Max. Peacock fully launched in the United States on July 15
and as of September had over 15 million sign-ups, according to
Comcast. AT&T said in July that HBO Max attracted 4.1 million
customers in its first month; investors are awaiting subscriber
updates during AT&T’s Oct. 22 third-quarter earnings release.
Pivotal Research Group analyst Jeff Wlodarczak wrote in an Oct.
7 note that Netflix’s guidance of 2.5 million new paid
subscribers appears “reasonable” given these factors. “Our view
remains that the unfortunate COVID-19 situation simply
accelerated trends already in place... and Netflix is likely to
remain as the dominant global SVOD player for the foreseeable
future,” he wrote.
As of Oct. 18, analysts were forecasting Netflix third-quarter
profit of $968.6 million on revenue of $6.38 billion.
(Reporting by Helen Coster; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)
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