A rare Netflix skeptic on Wall Street says it fails the grandmother test: The winner of the streaming wars will have to do too much to stay on top
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Netflix continues to only compete against itself.

After being unofficially crowned the winner of the streaming wars, it now has to face a more daunting adversary: Wall Street expectations. Netflix has overcome much worse before in the recent past. Look no further than its disastrous earnings in April 2022, when it reported a decline in subscribers for the first time in 10 years and sparked a stock rout that wiped $50 billion off its market cap in a single day. That led at least nine firms to downgrade Netflix’s stock, only for it to be praised as the dominant streamer by the turn of this new year.

The Street is now singing Netflix’s praises, with BMO rating the stock an outperform, convinced that with the Hollywood strikes over, it will attract the best actors and writers in Hollywood. Bank of America called it a “long-term winner” in a year-end overview of the media industry published in December, while Goldman had it at neutral, seeing its position getting entrenched. But Jason Bazinet of Citi Research issued a downgrade, and as he told Fortune, Netflix’s story is going to get too complicated, especially if the company considers a big acquisition around its long-rumored interest in gaming.

“If you can explain a story in two lines to your grandmother, that will get a higher multiple,” Bazinet tells Fortune. “As soon as you start mixing up nine different things that can go right or go wrong, people get bogged down and that ends up hurting the multiple.”

Bazinet was referring to Netflix’s play in video games, but he’s really referring to the curse of too much success. As he tells it, the costs of winning the streaming wars are going to mean Netflix has to spend too much money on content. Sure, its stock is going to go up, he added, but not by as much as the Street thinks.

Netflix did not respond to a request for comment.

Netflix’s position as the leader in streaming wasn’t in question to Bazinet, with the analyst calling it “a well-run company that has executed remarkably well in a highly competitive market.” But that’s not good enough for Citibank: “We no longer find the risk-reward compelling.”

“The evidence is clear to us and many others that Netflix has ‘won’ the streaming wars,” Bazinet writes, but that came with a huge stock appreciation, from roughly $200 per share in mid-2022 to about $485 per share today. And the market is pricing in a lot more room for it to run.

Citi Research sees more appreciation ahead, to be sure, but not at the rate of its peers on the Street. And missing Wall Street’s expectations tends to hurt a company’s stock price, even if underlying performance remains strong. For example, in the third quarter of 2023, Alphabet grew revenue by 11% to $76.9 billion for the period, but missed analyst expectations on its closely watched cloud segment, causing the stock to fall 8.8%.