Netflix, Inc. (NASDAQ:NFLX) customers will be paying as much as 18 percent more for their streaming video subscription and Street analysts were mostly optimistic on the move.
What Benefit Will It Bring?
Netflix has two options for its extra cash, including lowering its overall cash flow burn which is still projected to be $3.3 billion in 2019. Instead, the company can add the extra $400 million to finance even more programming.
Netflix has a path towards increasing its annual price by as much 4.4-percent per year through 2025, which Harrigan said would value the stock at $443 per share. A more conservative baseline 3.5 percent annual price increase is used to generate the current price target of $382, which the research firm continues to monitor as it implies just 8-percent upside.
Tigress: Downside To Low $200s Per Share Likely
Netflix's price increase comes at a time of heavy investment in original programming at the expense of rising debt levels, Tigress Financial Partners' Ivan Feinseth
said in his daily newsletter. The company most recently issued $2 billion of bonds in October and now carries $14 billion worth of outstanding debt.
Investors are recommended to be sellers of Netflix's stock at current levels as it has a path towards the mid-to-low $200 per share level.
'Simplest Thing To Model'
It's also possible Netflix is seeing its subscriber trends stalling so it is "entering harvest mode" to help lift total revenue, the analyst said.
Price Action
Netflix traded at $352.57 per share Wednesday afternoon.
Related Link:
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