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Netflix (NFLX) reported its fiscal second quarter earnings on Tuesday after market close as the company battles ongoing inflationary pressures, increased competition, and an uptick in subscriber churn.
The streaming giant's Q2 subscriber numbers showed a narrower loss than expected, causing shares to surge more than 8% in after-hours trading. Revenue and adjusted earnings per share were mixed amid the broader subscriber slowdown, in addition to increased pressures from foreign exchange with the dollar holding strong relative to other currencies.
Here are Netflix's second quarter results compared to Wall Street's consensus estimates, as compiled by Bloomberg:
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Revenue: $7.97 billion versus $8.05 billion expected
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Adj. earnings per share (EPS): $3.20 versus $2.98 expected
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Subscribers: Loss of 970,000 versus loss of 2 million users expected
The streaming giant's loss of nearly 1 million paying users for the second quarter is the worst quarterly decline in the company's history after the streamer lost 200,000 users in April.
Netflix co-CEO Reed Hastings admitted on the earnings call that "it's tough losing a million [subscribers] and calling it a success," but he reiterated that the company is "set up really well for the next year."
Still, Netflix revealed softer Q3 subscriber guidance, anticipating 1 million net additions for the current quarter — below Wall Street's consensus estimate of 1.9 million.
Q3 revenue guidance also came in lighter than expected at $7.84 billion versus the estimated $8.1 billion.
"Our challenge and opportunity is to accelerate our revenue and membership growth by continuing to improve our product, content, and marketing as we’ve done for the last 25 years, and to better monetize our big audience," Netflix said in a letter to shareholders.
The platform added that it expects 2022 free cash flow to hit "approximately +$1 billion, plus or minus a few hundred million dollars (assuming no material further movements in [foreign exchange.]"
"Stranger Things" season 4, which debuted episodes one through seven on May 27, may have been Netflix's savior for the quarter.
In addition to breaking the record for Netflix's biggest ever premiere weekend, the Duffer Brothers' production also earned the highest viewership among all English-language Netflix seasons, with 930.3 million hours viewed in its first 28 days and 1.3 billion hours viewed in its first four weeks.
Netflix stock, which closed Tuesday's trading session at $201 a share on the heels of a market rally, has plummeted roughly 70% year-to-date.
'Streaming Recession' on the horizon?
Prior to Netflix's highly anticipated report, Morgan Stanley (MS) warned that a potential "streaming recession" could be on the horizon — downgrading shares at both Paramount Global (PARA) and Fox Corporation (FOXA) as a result.