Netflix getting into gaming: report

In This Article:

Truist Securities analyst Matthew Thornton joins Yahoo Finance Live to discuss Netflix’s hiring of Mike Verdu — a former EA and Oculus executive — and what its speculated expansion into the gaming industry means for its competitors and stock.

Video Transcript

MYLES UDLAND: Welcome back to Yahoo Finance Live on this Thursday morning. Yesterday, Netflix shares were higher in after market trading. And we see shares this morning at last check up a couple tenths of 1% amid a red day, as the company-- or as it was reported that the company has hired Mike Purdue, a gaming executive from Facebook, though he's had tenures at a number of other gaming companies, as we talked about earlier on in the program, to beef up the company's push into the gaming space.

And joining us now to discuss is Matt Thornton. He's a security analyst over at Truist. Matt, thanks so much for jumping on. And I'm just curious how you're thinking about Netflix's opportunity in gaming-- first, what it means for maybe their competitors, and how serious you think they could be about this push.

MATTHEW THORNTON: Yeah, good morning. Thanks for having me. I think for Netflix, look, I think this is an extension of their content strategy-- an extension of just like they moved into unscripted and premium films, children's programming, and the like. I think this is another extension here.

And there is an opportunity here, at least at the margin, to differentiate the service versus some of their direct peers and help drive engagement, retention, and, of course, thus, subscriber growth and revenue growth. What the content strategy will be here still remains to be seen. Are they going to keep this to their own first party content only, build their own content?

And if that is the case, it would be probably fairly small, it would be very slow to reach scale, and probably wouldn't be overly disruptive to the overall videogame sphere, but, again, could be accretive to their business. They could also get more aggressive by going after acquisitions to kind of supplement their own organic development efforts.

And I think, you know, the biggest opportunity, of course, would be to actually open up to third party content as well, which would put them a little more head to head and comparable to the platforms out there that are offered by Microsoft, or Sony, or Nintendo, Google, Amazon, and others. So again, we think it's marginally accretive here at a minimum for Netflix over the long-term. But the content strategy and how they'll dial that up, I think, still remains to be seen.