Netflix's Modest Growth Forecast Casts Pall Over Streaming

Rival services such as Disney+, HBO Max, and Amazon Prime Video are spending billions on content to attract subscribers.

Advertisement
By Reuters | Updated: 21 January 2022 17:20 IST
Highlights
  • Netflix stock was down more than 20 percent
  • 0 percent of Netflix's growth is expected to come from outside
  • Co-Founder Reed Hastings told investors there's ample room for growth

Netflix projected gains of 2.5 million subscribers in the January through March quarter

Photo Credit: Akhil Arora/Gadgets 360

Even as Netflix executives sought to reassure investors in a Thursday video interview that its long-term prospects for streaming media remain bright, with its popular series Bridgerton returning for a second season and a science-fiction film starring Ryan Reynolds coming soon, shares slipped.

By the end of the 45-minute earnings interview, Netflix stock was down more than 20 percent, casting a pall over the entertainment industry. Wall Street analysts and the company's own executives struggled to explain why the world's dominant streaming service forecast modest growth for the first three months of 2022, when many had anticipated a return to predictable, pre-pandemic quarterly gains.

"It's tough to say exactly why our acquisition hasn't kind of recovered to pre-Covid levels," said Netflix CFO Spencer Neumann. "It's probably a bit of just overall COVID overhang that's still happening after two years of a global pandemic that we're still unfortunately not fully out of, some macroeconomic strain in some parts of the world, like Latin America, in particular."

Advertisement

Netflix projected gains of 2.5 million subscribers in the January through March quarter, roughly two-thirds of the 4 million customers added in the same period a year earlier. Wall Street analysts pointed to heightened competition and a slower-than-anticipated return to normalcy after the distortions of the pandemic as possible factors.

Advertisement

Pivotal Research Group analyst Jeff Wlodarczak said Netflix and other services that added subscribers during the pandemic lockdown in early 2020 - including Disney+ and Peloton - are struggling to regain equilibrium after outsized gains.

“Streaming is not over, it is the future,” Wlodarczak wrote. “And today, streaming still has a relatively small percentage of global television viewership.”

Advertisement

Others saw Netflix's muted first-quarter forecast as a sign of intensifying competition - though co-CEO Ted Sarandos told investors: "We didn't see a hit to our engagement. We didn't see a hit to retention - all of those things that would classically lead you to looking at competition."

Rival services, such as Disney's Disney+, WarnerMedia's HBO Max, and Amazon Prime Video, are spending billions on content to attract subscribers.

Advertisement

“The reality is that the streaming market has become saturated,” wrote Mike Proulx, vice president of research for Forrester. “This translates to more choice for consumers, who are growing concerned with the aggregate costs of their streaming subscriptions.”

Though 90 percent of Netflix's growth is expected to come from outside its home market, analysts are closely tracking how Netflix's latest price increase, which boosted the cost of a monthly subscription to $15 (roughly Rs. 1,110), will affect subscriptions in the United States and Canada.

"Whether Netflix can retain subscribers at historical rates now that their most popular tier costs the same as HBO Max after their most recent price increase will be important to gauge,” wrote Joe McCormack, Analyst at Third Bridge, “As we head into a 2022 year that many seem to believe will come with streaming video subscriber saturation overall."

Netflix co-Founder Reed Hastings told investors there's ample room for growth, as streaming gradually replaces traditional television over the next decade or two.

"For now, we're just like staying calm," he said.

© Thomson Reuters 2022


Looking to buy headphones? Listen to the experts on Orbital, the Gadgets 360 podcast. Orbital is available on Spotify, Gaana, JioSaavn, Google Podcasts, Apple Podcasts, Amazon Music and wherever you get your podcasts.
Affiliate links may be automatically generated - see our ethics statement for details.
 

Get your daily dose of tech news, reviews, and insights, in under 80 characters on Gadgets 360 Turbo. Connect with fellow tech lovers on our Forum. Follow us on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News for instant updates. Catch all the action on our YouTube channel.

Further reading: Netflix, HBO Max, Amazon Prime Video
Advertisement

Related Stories

Popular Mobile Brands
  1. SanDisk Extreme Fit USB Type-C Flash Drive Launched in India at This Price
  2. Samsung Galaxy M17e 5G India Launch Set for March 17: Features
  1. NASA’s Webb Telescope Confirms Asteroid 2024 YR4 Will Safely Pass the Moon in 2032
  2. ChatGPT Adult Mode Delayed Again as OpenAI's 'Code Red' Reportedly Ends
  3. Lava Bold 2 5G India Launch Date Announced; Confirmed to Feature Under-Display Fingerprint Scanner
  4. Realme Note 80 Launched With 6,300mAh Battery, 6.74-Inch Display: Price, Specifications
  5. Anthropic’s Claude Finds 22 Vulnerabilities in Mozilla Firefox in Just Two Weeks
  6. Samsung Galaxy Smartphones Get Inactivity Restart Security Feature With Latest Update: Report
  7. Poco C85x 5G Key Specifications, Features Revealed a Day Ahead of Launch in India
  8. Rooster Now Available for Streaming Online: What You Need to Know About its Plot, Cast, and More
  9. Bhartha Mahasayulaku Wignyapthi OTT Release Date Reportedly Revealed: When and Where to Watch Ravi Teja’s Romantic Drama Online?
  10. Ghost Elephants Out on OTT: Know Where to Watch This Biographical Film Online
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2026. All rights reserved.