Netflix‘s crackdown on password-sharing likely boosted subscribers by about 6 million in the third quarter and the streaming pioneer is expected to set the stage for price increases when it reports earnings on Wednesday.
The only profitable major streamer, Netflix has resisted joining rivals like Walt Disney in hiking ad-free prices this year and instead curbed password-sharing outside households to tap the more than 100 million viewers who use its service without subscribing, a Reuters report stated yesterday.
“Netflix now closely resembles a utility in many markets,” analysts at Bernstein said, “The challenge of being labelled a utility is how a maturing company continues finding growth.”
It could hike prices after the end of the Hollywood actors strike, a media report said earlier in October.
Five months after calling a strike that plunged Hollywood into turmoil, the Writers Guild of America (WGA) last week approved a new contract with major studios.
Netflix, however, has weathered the strike well, thanks to its larger international presence and strong content slate.
After a slow start for the ad plan launched last year, analysts said they expect Netflix will raise prices of its ad-free options in the coming months to nudge more subscribers to the other tier, where commercials help bring in more revenue per user.
So far, most viewers subscribing to Netflix after the password crackdown have opted for the ad-free plans, analysts said. Its standard plan with ads costs $6.99 a month, while the ad-free plans start at $15.49.
Overall, Wall Street expects the streamer to post its strongest quarterly subscriber additions this year, according to LSEG data.
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