Netflix ended Q1 with 221.64 million paid subs, a decline from the 221.84 million it had globally at the conclusion of last year. The company, led by co-CEOs Reed Hastings (its founder) and Ted Sarandos (who is also chief content officer), previously predicted it would add 2.5 million subscribers in the January-March quarter. After the giant whiff, Netflix stock (NFLX) immediately sunk by roughly 25 percent – or down about $85 – per share. Prior to the financial results becoming public, NFLX closed Tuesday under $350 per share, about half the mighty heights it hit in the fall.

“Our revenue growth has slowed considerably as our results and forecast below show. Streaming is winning over linear, as we predicted, and Netflix titles are very popular globally,” the company’s Tuesday note to shareholders begins. “However, our relatively high household penetration — when including the large number of households sharing accounts — combined with competition, is creating revenue growth headwinds. The big COVID boost to streaming obscured the picture until recently.” Netflix’s previous expectation was pessimistic in its own right since the same quarter last year added 4 million global paid subs. Executives explained away that self-downgrade by blaming “a more back-end weighted content slate” – namely “Bridgerton” Season 2 and Ryan Reynolds movie “The Adam Project” both launching in March. Clearly, they underestimated the issues. One of the main problems with the top SVOD (subscriber video on-demand) platform lies in its own success. Netflix has essentially maxed out in the U.S. and Canada; anyone who lives here and wants Netflix already has it. While there are still opportunities to add valuable subscribers in certain European markets, much of what is left for Netflix comes from the likes of India and Africa — markets with lots of people but little disposable income. All Netflix can do there is ask for pennies on the dollar, unless it elects to monetize viewers through advertising. To this point, Netflix has avoided ads, but there are signs the company is softening its stance on commercials. That would have been blasphemous at the Los Gatos, California headquarters just a few years ago. Doane Gregory/Netflix

Netflix also has an opportunity to simultaneously reevaluate its revenue streams and internal principles by cracking down on password sharing. The company is trying that in Latin America these days, and the test-program sounds like it will expand rapidly — and globally. “There’s a broad range of engagement when it comes to sharing households from high to occasional viewing,” the Tuesday shareholder letter states. “So while we won’t be able to monetize all of it right now, we believe it’s a large short- to mid-term opportunity.” Netflix estimates its paid subscribers are sharing the service with an additional 100 million households, more than 30 million of which come from the U.S. and Canada. On Tuesday, Netflix reported Q1 net income of $1.597 billion — or diluted earnings per share (EPS) of $3.53 — on $7.868 billion in revenue. Within its year-end 2021 earnings, Netflix had forecast net income of $1.3 billion and diluted earnings per share of $2.86 on $7.9 billion. So at least the company’s profit outperformed those internal (though shared with stockholders and the media) expectations. However, net income for the first quarter of 2022 was down from the comparable three-month period in 2021. Sign Up: Stay on top of the latest breaking film and TV news! Sign up for our Email Newsletters here.

Netflix Actually Lost 200 000 Subscribers in Q1 - 46