OPEN APP
Home >Companies >News >Squid Game mania lures new subscribers to Netflix, boosts up earnings

Squid Game mania lures new subscribers to Netflix, boosts up earnings

 Squid Game, a globally popular South Korea-produced Netflix show that depicts hundreds of financially distressed characters competing in deadly children’s games for a chance to escape severe debt, has struck a raw nerve at home, where there’s growing discontent over soaring household debt, decaying job markets and worsening income inequality. (AP)Premium
 Squid Game, a globally popular South Korea-produced Netflix show that depicts hundreds of financially distressed characters competing in deadly children’s games for a chance to escape severe debt, has struck a raw nerve at home, where there’s growing discontent over soaring household debt, decaying job markets and worsening income inequality. (AP)

  • Netflix added 4.38 million subscribers in the third quarter, according to a statement Tuesday, exceeding projections of 3.72 million
  • Netflix estimates it can reach 450 million customers or more all over the world. For that to happen, it will need to sign up customers in poorer countries

Listen to this article

Netflix Inc. posted its best subscriber growth of the year, beating Wall Street estimates thanks to the popularity of “Squid Game," its breakout drama from South Korea.

The company added 4.38 million subscribers in the third quarter, according to a statement Tuesday, exceeding projections of 3.72 million. Netflix expects to sign up 8.5 million customers in the final three months of 2021, compared with Wall Street estimates of 8.32 million, thanks to an “unprecedented" slate of upcoming shows.

A busy programming slate in the final four months will help Netflix recover from a slow start to the year. The service added just 5.5 million customers in the first six months of 2021, the least since 2013. Analysts had worried the slowdown would drag on after July and August passed without the return of popular shows. But new seasons of “La Casa de Papel" and “Sex Education," as well as “Squid Game," a show about a deadly contest, brought in millions of new customers in September.

About 142 million member households started watching “Squid Game," making it the most-viewed new show in Netflix history. Executives wore track suits inspired by the show during a prerecorded earnings call for investors. The company finished the quarter with 213.6 million subscribers.

“As the quarter continued, we saw an acceleration in our growth," Chief Financial Officer Spencer Neumann said on the call. Neumann said he hoped the company had escaped the uncertainty of the pandemic, which made it harder to forecast results. Netflix is on pace to add more than 18 million customers this year, though that’s the least since 2016.

Shares of Netflix were down more than 1% in extended trading after the results were announced. The stock has been on a tear lately as investors’ hopes for faster growth took hold, rising 34% from its 2021 low in May.

The question for investors is whether Netflix can sustain its growth in Asia and Europe in the years ahead. 

Those two regions supplied most of the new customers in the quarter, pulling in almost 4 million subscribers. Asia has been Netflix’s fastest-growing territory in recent months, and “Squid Game" bolstered that trend. Europe, the Middle East and Africa had been the fastest-growing market the past couple years. The company is investing millions of dollars in productions for South Korea, India and Japan, as well as Africa.

What Bloomberg Intelligence Says:

“The subscriber beat provides momentum into 4Q and affirms our confidence in Netflix’s strategy and execution in creating local-language originals that can resonate globally."

Netflix didn’t address the controversy over comedian Dave Chappelle’s jokes about gay and trans people in a new stand-up special. It has spawned worker unrest and the leak of company documents. Some of Netflix’s creative partners planned to protest outside of its Hollywood offices Wednesday in solidarity with those communities.

Investors have worried that competition will slow or even reverse Netflix’s growth, but the company has insisted it has plenty more room to grow. Netflix said Tuesday third-quarter sales increased 16% to $7.48 billion, aided in part by price increases. Profit rose 83% to $1.45 billion, or $3.19 a share.

Netflix has already proved skeptics wrong on many other points. It said it will be cash flow positive next year and annually moving forward, and it has started to make popular shows and movies in-house, in addition to using outside producers.

Netflix estimates it can reach 450 million customers or more all over the world. For that to happen, it will need to sign up customers in poorer countries, since its growth at home has slowed. Just one quarter after losing 430,000 customers in the U.S. and Canada, Netflix added 70,000 subscribers in those countries. The company started testing a free plan in Kenya that it hopes can entice people to upgrade to a full subscription.

“No one is really sure" if Netflix can return to the levels of subscriber growth it saw before the pandemic, co-founder Reed Hastings said on the call. But the company is confident in the short term because it has a stacked lineup in the final three months.

Netflix has a deep slate of films with big names arriving in the next couple months, including “Red Notice," starring Dwayne Johnson and Ryan Reynolds, and “The Power of the Dog," featuring Benedict Cumberbatch and Kirsten Dunst. It will also release new seasons of hit shows “The Witcher" and “Cobra Kai."

“We are in uncharted territory," Hastings said. “We have so much content coming in Q4 like we’ve never had."

This story has been published from a wire agency feed without modifications to the text. Only the headline has been changed.

Subscribe to Mint Newsletters
* Enter a valid email
* Thank you for subscribing to our newsletter.

Never miss a story! Stay connected and informed with Mint. Download our App Now!!

Close
×
Edit Profile
My ReadsRedeem a Gift CardLogout