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NFLX Tumbles On Qwikster Announcement; Are Netflix's Best Days Behind It?

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By DAVID K. RANDALL   09/19/11 07:01 PM ET   AP

NEW YORK -- Netflix is trying to boost business by chopping its services into two separate parts. Unfortunately for investors, the company's stock price is what's really been cleaved.

The company that once seemed like it could do no wrong has seen its stock lose half its value in the last two months. Netflix tumbled another 7.4 percent to $143.75 on Monday, on the same day that chief executive Reed Hastings sent an email to Netflix customers, announcing that the DVD-by-mail business that defined the company for much of its history will become a separate, renamed service called Qwikster. Customers who subscribe to both streaming and DVDs will soon see two separate charges on their credit card statements and have to log on to two different websites.

It's a hard landing for a company that made many investors rich while remaking the way that households watch movies. It was only ten months ago that Netflix's success prompted Standard and Poor's to add the company to its S&P 500 index, a broad measure of the stock market that is the basis for most U.S. mutual funds. Since then, Netflix shares have dropped 26 percent. Some analysts now think the stock's best days are behind it, beset by increased competition and its recent corporate blunders.

"Clearly the company is not going to grow at the rate that it has in the past few years," said Michael Corty, an analyst at Morningstar who covers Netflix.

Two years ago, the company traded at around $45 a share. Its subscriber base was swelling at a rate of 25 percent a year as customers were drawn by the value of rental plans that included no late fees for DVDs and unlimited streaming of movies and television shows. The company was so successful at adding new customers that some analysts predicted it wouldn't be long until consumers cut their cable cords and relied on Netflix alone for content.

Rising profits and a booming subscriber base helped lift Netflix's stock price 219 percent last year to $175.70. As recently as February, investors were willing to pay $93 for $1 in the company's profits. The broad S&P 500 index, meanwhile, traded at a price to earnings ratio of 16.

But the last two months have upended those rosy growth scenarios. Since announcing higher prices on July 12, the company's stock has plunged 51 percent from a high of $298.73. Netflix announced on September 15 that its subscribers will fall to 24 million U.S. households at the end of the month – only the second time in the company's history that its subscriber base has dropped from one quarter to the next. And the company faces increased competition from Amazon, Apple and a host of others, which will likely drive its costs higher.

"Netflix was basically a monopoly in the streaming business until about six months ago, and the effect was that content providers were underpricing their products," said Charlie Wolf, an analyst who covers the company at Needham. On February 22nd, Amazon announced that it would stream 5,000 movies and television shows at no additional charge to customers who signed up for a Prime membership, which costs $79 a year.

Wolf said that increased competition among streaming companies meant that the balance of power was tipping back to the movie studios and networks that produce entertainment. These companies can now play Netflix and its competitors off of one another, creating higher profits for themselves and forcing streaming companies to raise their prices or cut into their margins. Netflix recently lost its license to stream popular movies from Starz Entertainment over a dispute over fees.

Streaming isn't the only aspect of Netflix's business that is coming under fire. Its traditional DVD business is also being challenged by Redbox, a division of Coinstar Inc. that rents DVDs at 33,330 kiosks in supermarkets and other retailers. Coinstar's stock is up 6 percent over the last six months, compared with a 32 percent drop for Netflix.

Wolf thinks Netflix shares should trade at a fair value of $130 _a 10 percent drop from Monday's closing price.

Other analysts believe Netflix is bungling Qwikster's rollout. "Netflix has built such a strong brand name, so to switch the name of the website now doesn't make a lot of sense to me," said Corty, the analyst at Morningstar.

He said any marketing or executive missteps could come back to hurt the company as its business faces more competition and potentially higher costs. Corty said, the new emphasis on streaming means Netflix will have to constantly renegotiate its licenses to stream movies, giving the companies that produce entertainment more leverage.

Corty says that he wouldn't recommend buying Netflix until its shares fall to $90 _a 37 percent drop from its current price.

But even amid the gloom about Netflix's future direction, there are some investors sitting on gains and holding onto the stock because they assume more are to come. Jeanie Wyatt, the chief investment officer for South Texas Money Management, a firm with $1.9 billion in assets under management, began buying Netflix when it was trading at $120.

Her investment was once up 150 percent. Now it's up just 25 percent. Even so, she attributed the company's recent tumbles to growing pains. She believes the company will continue to perform better than the overall stock market over the next several years, in part because Qwikster will also rent video games by mail – a first for the company.

"I don't think that this is a growth story that's broken," she said.

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NEW YORK -- Netflix is trying to boost business by chopping its services into two separate parts. Unfortunately for investors, the company's stock price is what's really been cleaved. The company tha...
NEW YORK -- Netflix is trying to boost business by chopping its services into two separate parts. Unfortunately for investors, the company's stock price is what's really been cleaved. The company tha...
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06:51 PM on 09/20/2011
From a story published April 25, 2011 "The company said it made profit of $60.2 million, nearly double the $32.3 million it earned one year ago."


They were #1 but Instead of thinking that they should become better than #1 (they should become Ubiquitous - kind of like GOOGLE) , they blew it.

They should have lowered their prices and kept the all-in-one service - maybe even adding the GameRentals to it

$1 or $2 dollars lowering of their prices - + plus keeping same service (and maybe adding game rentals for a small extra fee) should have been enough to help them gather so much goodwill from exisiting and new customers they would have been a force to reckon with in their industry.

Now they are a company which will probably be sold in the next few years and subsequently it's name dissaper.

But Hey! that Base Capitalism - try to give your customers the least that you can give them while raking in the Profits.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jimtodd
Unrepentant child of '60s
01:42 PM on 09/20/2011
Netflix seems to be determined to fade to black. They are simultaneously increasing customer fees and decreasing the value delivered. Many, not all, customers saw DVD availability as a consolation when the desired title was not available via streaming. Now it seems that some MBA has interpreted the flow of DVDs as a market opportunity, rather than as the indicator of the weakness of Netflix' streaming catalog, that it really is. The two primary drivers of DVD rentals are the sorry state of the American infrastructure, and the lack of a semi-decent online library of films.
12:49 PM on 09/20/2011
Did Hastings impulsively e-blast his entire customer list before checking with anyone else at the company? The email was bad in so many ways:

1. He apologizes for raising prices, but offer no new price concession.
2. A second bill, creates more hassle for existing customers.
3. It's all about what Netflix needs. What does he offer his customers?
4. Minor point but @qwikster was already taken on twitter. That guy is having a lot of fun with it now.

I'm still a big fan of Netflix for saving on entertainment costs. But I hope they get their executive act together.

http://cordcutterguide.com/
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
OswegoKayaker
Freedom's just another word . . .
11:52 AM on 09/20/2011
Trickster
Prankster
Gangster
Monster
Fraudster
Qwikster
Sounds like truth in advertising
10:09 AM on 09/20/2011
....Now two separate billings.....and two separate web sites.......which means two venues to raise prices now instead of one..........
...........and this is going to make customers feel better??

...............Here we go again........
11:42 PM on 09/20/2011
The funny thing is, according to Hasting's blog, the websites are going to be so integrated, that they may as well be the same. He acknowledged the other day on the blog that they're going to have to have direct links to the streaming queue from the dvd queue and vice versa. Seriously, if this was his idea, the board needs to fire him. If not, he needs to fire whomever came up with it. It's a lose, lose.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
garumphul
leave me alone, I don't want you as a friend
09:41 AM on 09/20/2011
Okay, Huff, we get it, you don't like Netflix.

Get over it.
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bkasaoff
Dogs. Cartoons. Skiing. People, too.
09:31 AM on 09/20/2011
Netflix changes Qwikster to Blockbuster!
http://nowpossible.com/2011/09/20/netflix-apologizes-qwikster-again/
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Rouvey
‹^› ‹(•¿•)› ‹^›
09:16 AM on 09/20/2011
Dear Netflix,

‹^› ‹(•¿•)› ‹^›
09:10 AM on 09/20/2011
I mainly use Netflix to rent TV seasons. Since my schedule is crazy, I'm behind a lot. I need to catch up on Curb your enthusiasm, always sunny in philadelphia,30R & Nurse Jackie.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
RattleCat
Part of the Mittless Protection Program
08:12 AM on 09/20/2011
When Netflix held off Blockbuster, it did so by offering better service, better pricing, and better selection.

Now, responding to new competition, Netflix is degrading service, raising prices, and losing selections.

Not to hard to figure out where this will lead.
10:10 AM on 09/20/2011
.....yup....

...................just watch............
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DanoX
I'll be your snack-pack baby!
06:53 AM on 09/20/2011
What's "Netflix"?
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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06:38 AM on 09/20/2011
I said this about 3 years ago that netflix would have to get into the producing business for leverage. They have no product and I knew the moment netflix started making money, they would be taken to the cleaners by the studios.

If they had their own product, then... they can make deals but as they stand now, they have no leg to stand on.

They could make a deal with a big studio but it's going to cost them a lot and that means it's going to cost YOU a lot.

Add to that the lost of their loyal customers and it's looking pretty bleak for netflix. Qwikster? How can they be serious about that. Too sad.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ILoveGreatDanes
When the going gets tough, the tough take a nap.
05:25 AM on 09/20/2011
After that huge rate hike, I dropped to streaming only from my streaming + 1 DVD at a time plan. I soon realized the streaming content was lousy, but I kept it for the Star Trek. I also have Amazon Prime. After this Quickster/Shyster nonsense, I checked my Amazon Prime account and found out they stream all the Star Trek, more than Netflix. I canceled. Netflix is a sinking ship, and the sad thing is, it was completely preventable.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Hunter Robbins
01:24 AM on 09/20/2011
Is there any truth to the rumor that the Parent Company of Netflix and Qwikster will be called Lame-as-phuckster.com?
10:19 PM on 09/19/2011
The honeymoon is definitely over. The price hike... a horrible customer service situation wherein I am told to contact Microsoft after Netflix's Silverlight installation fails to work... and now this ridiculous Qwikster spin-off/split/stupidity.

I guess it's time to see what Blockbuster has been up to...