https://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/BU2401/S00164/netflix-earnings-bigger-moat-bigger-audience-bigger-year-ahead.htm
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Netflix Earnings: Bigger Moat, Bigger Audience, Bigger Year Ahead?
Wednesday, 24 January 2024, 1:21 pm
Press Release: Parrot Analytics
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In 2023, Netflix expanded its lead over the competition
in global subscribers, consistent profitably, and the
intangible ability to galvanize audiences in a way no other
SVOD can.
The company is now well-positioned to
further expand its moat as the undisputed streaming and
entertainment leader in 2024 and beyond.
In Q4 2023,
Netflix grew its demand share for original series with
global and US audiences for the first time in over four
years, since before Disney+ and Apple TV+ launched. Doing
this without new episodes of Stranger Things,
Wednesday, or The Witcher is a testament to
Netflix’s strength. The platform was also the number one
streamer for total catalog demand with US audiences in 2023,
which accounts for all movies and series available on a
platform.
Netflix, more than any other streamer, can
have its cake (Is It Cake?) and eat it, too —
audience demand for its original content lures in new
subscribers, while demand for licensed content from its
rivals helps keep them on the platform. This was exemplified
by the ‘Suits effect’ and Netflix’s unrivaled
capacity to launch new content at scale in the midst of a
historic Hollywood labor stoppage last year.
That
said, several potential future platform combinations —
such as Hulu and Disney+ or even Max and Paramount+ —
would jump far ahead of Netflix in the catalog demand
category. This will be one of many storylines to watch as
industry M&A speculation ramps up throughout the
year.
It won’t all be smooth sailing. New seasons of
the aforementioned flagship originals remain mired in
delays. Will Netflix be able to retain Stranger
Things fans with just international series and network
reruns?
From a financial standpoint, Netflix must
provide a new growth strategy once the effects of its
password crackdown wear off, and reveal how the ad tier is
impacting ARPU. Revenue and profit are the name of the game
and with Netflix’s gaming ambitions currently cost-free
and no production shutdowns looming on the horizon to help
with free cash flow, Wall Street will need additional growth
narratives to keep the bears and bulls satiated.
But
the supply and demand data is clear: in 2024 Netflix is
positioned to expand its lead in the space, while the
competition debates whether to forge ahead on their own,
voluntarily opt out of the battle altogether, or join forces
to take on the market leader.
State of the
Industry
- Between the beginning of 2020 and Q4
2023, there has been a 261% increase in the global supply of
streaming original titles as leading companies have
prioritized DTC platforms and chased Netflix’s business
model.
- However, the rate of growth for streaming
original titles steadily slowed down in 2023, shrinking in
all four quarters of the year. Before 2023, there had not
been more than one quarter in a row of a shrinking growth
rate in global streaming original supply.
- In other
words, streamers are still making new shows, just not at the
same clip as they used to. This slowdown is a combination of
both major companies shifting business models and cutting
back, and the sharper drop offs in Q3 and Q4 are a clear
result of the Hollywood labor strikes.
Netflix
Streaming Original Supply Share
- Netflix’s
supply share of global streaming original titles has
steadily ticked down since 2020, as new competitors entered
the field, falling from 33.1% in Q1 2020 to 25.2% in Q4
2023.
- Looking at the supply share of new premieres
during each quarter, the impact of Netflix’s increased
competition is even more stark. As recently as Q3 2021,
Netflix accounted for 30.2% of all new streaming original
titles released globally that quarter. Fast forward to Q3
2023 and Netflix’s share of new streaming originals
worldwide was down to 14.7%.
- However, Netflix
reversed this trend big time in Q4 2023 — accounting for
27.4% of new streaming original premieres, nearly doubling
its supply share compared to the previous quarter. This is
clearly the result of Netflix having a deeper bench of new
content in the can — something co-CEO Ted Sarandos
emphasized repeatedly last year — and a more global
footprint than most of its competitors.
- Netflix’s
ability to release new content in Q4 2023, such as Fall
of the House of Usher, Blue Eye Samurai, and
Squid Game: the Challenge, is a major reason why it
was able to grow its US and global streaming original demand
share, and subscriber base at a time when its competitors
were struggling to attract new audiences to their respective
SVODs.
Demand for Newly Released
Series
- Of all major US streamers, Netflix is the
least reliant on demand for shows that released new episodes
in the past 12 months. In fact, its percentage of demand for
new content ticked down from 33.8% to 32.1% from Q3 to Q4
2023, likely as a result of the strike.
- This shows
Netflix’s volume of both licensed content, and hit
originals that haven’t released new episodes lately, are
still keep subscribers entertained and engaged.
- As
of Q4 2023, Netflix was able to both increase its supply of
new series compared to the competition, and decrease its
reliance on audience demand for shows released in the last
12 months. This combination of forces points to why Netflix
is poised to pad its lead on the streaming and entertainment
field in 2024.
Total Catalog Demand
Share
- While demand for original content drives
subscription growth, library content is key for customer
retention, and catalog demand is a good indicator of which
SVODs consumers are most likely to use as a default
‘streaming home.’
- Netflix remained in first
place here, and slightly increased its position in the full
year 2023, up to 17.9% from 17.7% in 2022.
- While
Netflix has a sizable lead over the field, it’s worth
noting that a full combination of the some of the trailing
platforms — such as Disney+ and Hulu, or Max and
Paramount+ should Warner Bros. Discovery and Paramount merge
— would overtake Netflix as the top streamer for all
content demand.
Streaming Originals Demand
Share
- Q4 2023 was the first time since the
‘Streaming Wars’ began in earnest in which Netflix’s
global demand share grew quarter over quarter, with an ever
so slight increase from 33.3% to 33.4%.
- This may
seem small, but it is a telling datapoint. It means that, at
least for one quarter, the growth of global demand for
programming from legacy-backed and niche streamers is no
longer outpacing the growth in demand for Netflix series,
bucking a roughly four year trend. Whether or not Netflix
can keep this up for more than one quarter remains to be
seen.
- Since Netflix’s global share of the supply
of streaming originals is down to 25.2% in Q4 2023, 33.4%
demand share should be considered an over-performance.
Netflix is still delivering strong value to their
subscribers especially when it comes to streaming originals
— a key leading indicator of subscriber
growth.
- That said, three years ago, Netflix was
outperforming its supply share by a much higher margin. In
Q3 2020, Netflix had 32.0% supply share of global streaming
originals, and 50.4%
demand.
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