Netflix first-quarter earnings top analyst views as service adds 1.7 million more subscribers
By Michael Liedtke, APWednesday, April 21, 2010
Netflix 1Q profit rises with 1.7M more subscribers
SAN FRANCISCO — Netflix Inc.’s first-quarter income rose 44 percent as the movie subscription service added 1.7 million more customers to extend a torrid streak of growth.
The results announced Wednesday are the latest evidence of Netflix’s rising popularity. The service has picked up more than 5 million subscribers in the past 18 months as more households embrace Netflix’s DVD-by-mail and Internet video packages that start at $9 per month.
Netflix’s stock price has more than tripled during that span, and the strong first-quarter performance persuaded more investors to buy the shares. Shares of Netflix gained $1.02 in extending trading Wednesday after ending the regular session at $86.98, down 9 cents.
“It was another slam-dunk quarter for them,” Signal Hill analyst Todd Greenwald said. “They are in a real sweet spot right now.”
The company ended March with nearly 14 million subscribers and expects to add 700,000 to 1 million customers by July. That could prove to be a conservative estimate, given that the first-quarter growth blew past management’s expectations.
The company, based in Los Gatos, Calif., earned $32.3 million, or 59 cents per share, in the first three months of the year. That compared with net income of $22.4 million, or 37 cents per share, at the same time last year.
The earnings per share came in a nickel above the average estimate among analysts polled by Thomson Reuters.
Revenue climbed 25 percent to nearly $494 million, matching analyst estimates.
Although Netflix began as a DVD-rental service and the discs remain its biggest moneymaker, streaming video over the Internet has been playing an increasingly bigger role in the company’s success.
The digital delivery option is becoming more prevalent as Netflix links its service with video game consoles, Blu-ray players and other Web-enabled gadgets that can easily be plugged into flat-panel televisions.
Netflix said 55 percent of its subscribers viewed at least 15 minutes of video from its Internet streaming service in the first quarter, marking the first time at least half its audience was using the option.
Even more subscribers are expected to use Internet streaming as Netflix licenses more titles from movie studios. To expand that library, Netflix has been agreeing to delay sending out newly released DVDs for four weeks to give the studios a better chance to sell the discs in stores.
Netflix has been aggressively pushing the Internet option to save on postage to ship DVDs. The company also wants to make sure it has a thriving digital video service to remain relevant as DVDs wane in usage, and it faces more competition for other Internet video services from the likes of Amazon.com Inc., Wal-Mart Stores Inc. and Best Buy Co. Inc.