Skip to main content

Netflix lost 800,000 subscribers during Q3, headed into the red in Q4

Netflix-Reed-Hastings
Image used with permission by copyright holder

In its earnings call with investors today, Netflix announced that it lost about 800,000 subscribers during the third fiscal quarter of this year. Over the same period, the company also managed to bring in record revenue, exceeding the expectations of Wall Street analysts.

Last month, Netflix announced that it expected to have a total subscriber base of 24 million at the end of this quarter. The actual number is 23.8 million (21.5 million streaming, 13.4 million DVD rental) subscribers. While this is only slightly lower than anticipated (if you can call 200,000 of anything ‘slight’), investors are not taking the news well. Netflix’s stock has tumbled more than 20 percent in after-hours trading to around $92 (at the time of this writing). That’s down from a high earlier this year of about $300.

Netflix posted profits of $62 million, a 63 percent jump from last year, on $822 million in revenue (at 49 percent leap). Wall Street analysts had expected revenue of about $811 million in the third quarter.

The drop in subscribers follows a tumultuous three months for Netflix and its CEO, Reed Hastings. In July, the company announced that it would boost the price of receiving both streaming services and DVD rentals by a minimum of 60 percent a month (from one $9.99 plan to two separate $7.99 plans), sparking user outcry that continues to reverberate throughout Netflix headquarters, for sure.

Then Hastings announced that Netflix was going to split in two, and create two separate businesses: Netflix would be streaming-only; and a new company, foolishly named Qwikster, would handle the mail-order DVD rental business. Hastings justified the move, saying that the two sides to the business already operated independently inside the company, it made good sense for them to split into separate entities in public as well.

Once again, customers became enraged and, less than a month later, Hastings reversed the Qwikster decision, saying that Netflix would remain one company.

In a letter to investors released today (pdf), Netflix had this to say about its back-to-back debacles:

…We think that $7.99 for unlimited streaming and $7.99 for unlimited DVD are both very aggressive low prices, relative to competition and to the value of the services, and they are the right place for Netflix to be in the long term. What we misjudged was how quickly to move there. We compounded the problem with our lack of explanation about the rising cost of the expansion of streaming content, and steady DVD costs, so that absent that explanation, many perceived us as greedy. Finally, we announced and then retracted a separate brand for DVD. While this branding incident further dented our reputation, and caused a temporary cancellation surge, compared to our price change, its impact was relatively minor. Our primary issue is many of our long‐term members felt shocked by the pricing changes, and more of them have expressed that by canceling Netflix than we expected.

The company expects its US subscribers to grow slightly during the fourth quarter, from 20 million streaming customers to 21.5 million; and from 10.3 million DVD customers to 11.3 million. Despite the growth, and expansion in the UK and Ireland early next year, Netflix says it expects to fall into the red during the fourth quarter.

Andrew Couts
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Features Editor for Digital Trends, Andrew Couts covers a wide swath of consumer technology topics, with particular focus on…
The best movie and TV show trailers of the week of May 3
Freya Allan in Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes.

Unless you're super dialed in to the latest entertainment news every day of the week, it's really easy to miss a new trailer for your favorite movie or TV show. That's why we're bringing together the best movie and TV show trailers of the week of May 3 in one place. All you really have to do now is scroll down and hit play.

Just releasing a new trailer isn't enough to get it on our roundup. We believe that the best trailers are the ones that don't give away too much about the story, while also building up a sense of excitement for the film or TV series. Most of all, we still want to be surprised when we actually watch the programing in question. Keep this in mind as we go over this week's trailers.
From season 3

Read more
Watch Kentucky Oaks 2024 live stream: Can you watch for free?
Let it ride with these tasty Kentucky Derby drinks

The 2024 Kentucky Oaks is set to run today at Churchill Downs. Though it may not be quite as popular as Saturday's main event, the Oaks is a Grade-1 race and undoubtedly one of the biggest races of the year for the top three-year-old fillies.

You're just in time, as coverage of all the Oaks Day races is about to start, at 1:00 p.m. ET, and in the United States it will be televised on USA Network. The Kentucky Oaks is set to post at 5:51 p.m. ET.

Read more
The best movies on Amazon Prime Video (May 2024)
Nicholas Galitzine and Anne Hathaway in The Idea of You.

Amazon Prime Video is starting off strong in May with several new additions to its library of movies, including the premiere of the original romantic drama The Idea of You. Last year's underrated Christmas drama The Holdovers is also now streaming on Prime Video. And as far as we're concerned, a good drama is never out of season.

Prime Video lost a handful of movies at the end of April, and Paul Thomas Anderson's Licorice Pizza is only sticking around through the end of the weekend. But everything else on our list of the best movies on Amazon Prime Video right now is still available. Just keep reading, and you can make plans to watch any of the films that you want to see this month.

Read more