Netflix Inc (NASDAQ: NFLX) sure had a great year as the COVID-19 pandemic fuelled demand for indoor means of entertainment last year. The streaming giant added a record 37 million new subscribers in 2020, and the stock jumped from a low of $333 last year in March to $535 at the time of writing.
Laura Martin’s comments on CNBC’s “The Exchangeâ€
Things, however, are about to change for Netflix, says Needham senior analyst Laura Martin, who does not see the stock as a part of the reopening trade. On CNBC’s “The Exchangeâ€, she said:
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“Nothing is getting better for Netflix, and it’s not a part of the reopening trade as it is not ad-driven. And advertising is going to be huge over the next twelve months. So, we’d rather be with the ad-driven tech stocks.â€
Martin also highlighted that Netflix now faces more serious competition from Discovery Plus, Disney Plus, Peacock. All of these services have $6 pricing tiers, which expand their total addressable markets. Netflix, on the other hand, has only one, up at the $15 level.
Why Laura Martin likes Apple better than Netflix
According to the Needham analyst, Apple is a much better reopening trade because it has a more suitable business model.
“Apple’s genius is that it built a tech stock and not it just takes a 30% toll on every app on its platform. It does nothing, and it earns 30% forever. Not true for Netflix, where they are spending $2 billion extra every year, barely breaking even. They do not have deep enough pockets to compete with even Viacom, which is going to spend $19 billion on content this year.â€
In April, Netflix said its net new paid subscribers were much lower than expected in Q1. The $237 billion company currently has a price to earnings ratio of 64.72.
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