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Streaming video veteran Netflix (NASDAQ: NFLX) is gearing up for a second-quarter report next Monday evening. Stock prices have more than doubled in 2018 and nearly tripled in 52 weeks as the company kept beating its own estimates of how quickly the subscriber base might grow.
Will this report be any different? Let's have a look at what to expect from Netflix's next business update.
Guidance targets
Metric | Q2 2018 Guidance | Q2 2017 Results | Expected Year-Over-Year Change |
---|---|---|---|
Total domestic subscribers | 57.9 million | 51.9 million | 12% |
Total international subscribers | 73.3 million | 52.0 million | 41% |
Total streaming subscribers | 131.2 million | 104.0 million | 26% |
Total revenue (including DVD) | $3.93 billion | $2.79 billion | 41% |
GAAP earnings per diluted share | $0.79 | $0.15 | 427% |
Free cash flows | Negative | ($608 million) | Not measurable |
Data source: Netflix.
Hitting these subscriber numbers on the nose would work out to 1.2 million net new domestic subscribers coming aboard during the second quarter and 5.0 million new international customers. That would be 6.2 million new members on a global level. Analysts and investors will keep a close eye on these particular metrics because they provide the best measuring stick for Netflix's subscriber-growth ambitions.
You'll find that top-line revenue keeps growing faster than the subscriber additions might suggest. The extra boost comes from a steady stream of small price increases, and there seems to be a steady flow of subscribers opting for pricier plans with higher video quality and the ability to concurrently stream Netflix content on more devices. Expect these trends to continue, especially in the international division.
For what it's worth, analyst firms Cowen and Baird recently raised their target prices on Netflix thanks to strong growth indicators in each firm's own survey of domestic and international video consumers. Baird said that international growth is coming in particularly hot while Cowen underscored Netflix's "outsized" share of viewing hours among younger audiences.
Image source: Getty Images.
Going beyond the raw numbers
To keep the subscriber additions coming, Netflix is making heavy investments to create a strong portfolio of original content. The English-speaking portion of this catalog is shrinking at the company leans on production teams in other markets. In the latest earnings call, content chief Ted Sarandos highlighted titles from Germany, Brazil, Spain, and Denmark as border-crossing wins.