Netflix membership climbs with global growth

Netflix says its total membership eclipsed 75 million just hours after the end of the official close of the quarter

PHOTO: AFP

SAN FRANCISCO:
Netflix on Tuesday reported that it remained profitable and added a record number of new subscribers in the final quarter of last year as it pushed to expand globally.

Netflix shares jumped more than six per cent to $115.20 after revealing that its ranks of members has topped 75 million and that it made a profit of $43 million in the final quarter of last year.

Northern California-based Netflix added a record 5.59 million members in the final three months of last year, topping market forecasts.

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Netflix said its total membership eclipsed 75 million just hours after the end of the official close of the quarter, and that it expected to add a total of 6.1 million members in the first three months of this year.

Netflix reported net income of $43 million in the quarter despite "foreign exchange headwinds" brought on by a strong US dollar and money poured into expanding to nearly every country but China.

The streaming television pioneer announced early this month that it had significantly expanded its global footprint to 190 countries, making its Internet TV service available in 130 new markets including Pakistan and India -- but not China.

Netflix, which began as a mail-order DVD service but is now producing award-winning original content alongside its offering of older shows and movies, launched in 2007.

Netflix co-founder and chief executive Reed Hastings called it the birth of a new global Internet TV network."

Hastings was cautiously optimistic regarding eventually getting into China, saying that it could take years.

"We have a very long-term look, and this could be many years of discussions," he said during an earnings webcast while discussing Netflix's efforts to offer programming online in China.


"We are going to take our time."

Netflix is keen to get the streaming service to China's population, but needs special permission from the government there.

Other countries or markets without the service are Crimea, North Korea and Syria due to US government restrictions on American companies, Netflix said.

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Netflix planned to pour energy into the array of new markets open to it now and crank up creation of original, local programming, according to executives.

Netflix is working on making programming available in languages other than English to strengthen appeal to audiences around the world.

The subscription show-streaming service also finds itself adjusting to payment styles and traditions in various countries.

"Think of it as we have really begun on global expansion, rather than its all sewed up," Hastings said during an earnings webcast.

Chief content officer Ted Sarandos envisioned a day when Netflix would spend more on original programming than it does on getting content from outside studios.

"On-demand Internet TV watching, wherever and whenever you want is very popular wherever you go in the world," Hastings said.

Netflix subscriptions were priced in new markets to target "elites," whom Hastings described as people likely to own iPhones and be comfortable with English-language shows.

For Netflix, this is going to be a year of investing in technology and programming while aiming to at least break-even financially, according to CFO David Wells.
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