Netflix subscriber growth slows, stock drops

In This Article:

Yahoo Finance's Julie Hyman and Brian Sozzi discuss Netflix's stock taking a dip, subscriber growth, the company's fourth quarter earnings, and the outlook for the streaming platform.

Video Transcript

JULIE HYMAN: We have to start by digging into Netflix and those disappointing numbers from the company on a number of different fronts here. Now with Netflix, of course, subscribers are always what tend to get the most attention. So let's run through those numbers quickly here.

Fourth quarter subscribers up 8.3 million. That misses the company's own prior guide of 8.5 million. Also the company saying, in this current quarter, it's going to grow subscribers by 2.5 million. That's versus growth of 4 million a year earlier. So pretty dramatic slowdown in that first quarter growth rate here. Also getting some attention, operating margin at 8.2% versus 14.4% a year earlier. That's the fourth quarter number there as the company spent more money on content.

And Brian Sozzi, some of the spending on content paid off. I mean, Netflix had some really big hits during the quarter and over the course of the year between "Squid Game," "Don't Look Up," also getting really big numbers. But it seems like it wasn't enough, particularly when you look across the globe.

BRIAN SOZZI: No, and it really wasn't enough for Wall Street. As you're seeing with the stock reaction here in the pre-market, Julie, absolutely vicious. I counted at least four downgrades by sell sign analysts this morning on Netflix after this quarter. Makes you wonder where the hell were they last week into this report. Nonetheless, there was a lot of concern here.

And there's a lot of concerning takeaways, I think, from the earnings call. When you have Reed Hastings, the co-chief executive officer of Netflix, hopping on this very lengthy earnings call, saying that, hey, we're being impacted by increased competition. We're being impacted by, what he is calling, a COVID hangover effect and, oh yeah, we really can't measure the impact of any of this stuff and when it might end, those are red flags.

And I think that's why you see the likes of Pivotal Research-- and I just wrote about this, the story's on the Yahoo Finance Homepage right now-- why you have analysts calling Netflix shares dead money, potentially dead money right now, even after this very sharp pullback.

JULIE HYMAN: Well, I'm curious because I didn't get a chance to take a look at that note size. Does Pivotal say it's dead money for how long? I mean, typically you'll get an analyst make a comment like that and say, you know, this is a period that's going to last X amount of time. Did they put a time frame on it?