Netflix stock surges but Wall Street still seems split on future

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Netflix (NFLX) shares closed 13% higher on Wednesday following the company's huge third-quarter earnings report. The platform delivered a beat on both the top and bottom lines, in addition to 2.41 million net subscriber additions — crushing estimates of 1 million.

"This company is clearly back on track," Geetha Ranganathan, senior media analyst at Bloomberg Intelligence, told Yahoo Finance Live as analysts begin to separate themselves into optimistic and not so optimistic buckets.

Following the strong results, Guggenheim's Michael Morris maintained his Buy rating, upping his price target by $40 to $305, while Wedbush Securities' Michael Pachter raised his price target to $325 (up from $280), citing "higher free cash flow expectations."

Evercore ISI's Mark Mahaney raised his price target by $40 to $340 and reiterated his Outperform rating. In a note to clients, the analyst wrote, "Netflix fundamentals have stabilized, and now comes the biggest catalyst across consumer internet – the launch of Netflix’s ad-supported offering in November."

Will ad-supported be the answer? Wall Street's split

Despite concerns that current subscribers will trade down to the ad-supported version, Citi Managing Director Jason Bazinet told Yahoo Finance Live that he views the introduction of advertising as a lucrative revenue driver.

"It's not a spin down risk, it's a spin up opportunity," the analyst maintained, surmising that the company could secure $10 or more in advertising revenue per ad-tier subscriber in the U.S.

Ranganathan agreed that ad-supported will be a strong future catalyst, explaining that the upcoming tier is "competitively" priced at $6.99 a month in the U.S.

Dave Heger, senior equity analyst at Edward Jones, added that "the ad-supported service should help drive subscriber growth in international markets" — a particularly salient point amid the strengthening U.S. dollar.

"The lower price point will be attractive in certain markets overseas — there's more ability to pay at that lower price point," he said, surmising that advertising revenue will help offset lower price points and, in turn, also offset foreign exchange (FX) pressures.

Netflix lowered its forward guidance, specifically citing FX challenges as the U.S. dollar continues to gain momentum against most major currencies.

"Based on our YTD actuals and Q4 guidance, we estimate that this appreciation since January 1, 2022 will negatively impact our full year 2022 revenue and operating income by ~$1 billion and $0.8 billion, respectively," the company stated in its earnings release.