Following Netflix, Inc. (NASDAQ:NFLX)‘s blowout quarter, the raft of analyst estimates have come in, and the financial picture seems to look greatly improved. Wall Street bumped its 2013 EPS projection to $1.15 from $0.40, and 2014 looks even rosier. Instead of $1.44, they now believe the streaming champion will bring in $2.74 per share.
There’s a problem here, though. At a price around $160 per share, that’s a considerable multiple to pay for a stock that already imploded once. This is starting to look like 2010 again for Netflix.
Be kind, please rewind
Let’s take a look back and go over what happened last week as shares jumped a whopping 71% for the week. Reporting fourth-quarter earnings, Netflix delivered an EPS profit of $0.13 against expectations of a $0.13 loss. That’s enough of a surprise, but the video streamer also made a huge jump in subscribers, adding nearly 4 million subscribers worldwide, bringing its streaming total above 33 million. That’s all great news, but some areas were wanting in the report. Revenue grew by just 8% over a year ago as Netflix has chosen to harvest its now 8 million DVD subscribers, but those mail-order holdouts still give the company more contribution profits than its domestic streaming base.
The table below shows the discrepancy among its three segments:
Category | Domestic Streaming | Domestic DVD | International Streaming |
---|---|---|---|
Revenue | $589 million | $254 million | $101 million |
Contribution Proift | $109 million | $128 million | ($105 million) |
Mail-order DVDs are by far the most profitable segment, but that division has been declining. Without the DVD business, the company would have barely had any gross profit in the quarter.
Additionally, of the 4 million new subscriptions, 1 million of them were not paid.
Deja vu, all over again
The stock situation isn’t the only thing giving investors a seen-it-before feeling. Netflix won the hearts of movie-watchers for disrupting the brick-and-mortar model championed by Blockbuster, which came with endless debates and fits of indecision over which movie to take home. But as technology moves forward, Netflix has been forced to reinvent itself. Streaming is supplanting the mail-order model, which makes Netflix more vulnerable to the likes of rivals such as Amazon.com, Inc. (NASDAQ:AMZN), Hulu, and Time Warner Inc. (NYSE:TWX)‘s HBO GO. But perhaps more important, streaming doesn’t give Netflix the leverage it had with the mail-order model, as the contribution margins above indicate.
Whereas before the company had only to pay the price of the DVD and take care of shipping and handling charges, it now must cough up enough dough to pay for steep licensing agreements. Recently, the rap on Netflix has been that overseas marketing and development costs are eating away at margins, but its cost of revenue (i.e., licensing fees) has increased disproportionately, as the table below shows.
Category | Q4 2012 | Q3 2012 | Q2 2012 | Q1 2012 |
---|---|---|---|---|
Revenue | $945 million | $905 million | $889 million | $870 million |
Cost of Revenue | $696 million | $663 million | $643 million | $624 million |
Gross Profit | $249 million | $242 million | $246 million | $246 million |
Gross Margin | 26.3% | 26.7% | 27.6% | 28.2% |
As you can see, despite incremental improvements in revenue, gross profit has barely gone up, and gross margin has dropped every quarter. The effects of shifting to the new model are clear, and even though the market cheered the quarter, profits still dropped 80% from a year ago, before the streaming service pushed into the U.K. It will take at least several quarters to return to that level.
We’ve seen this pattern before. Pandora Media Inc (NYSE:P) , the Internet radio service, has won much acclaim from its listeners, but profits have been evasive as content costs outpace revenue growth. Like Netflix, it doesn’t have the leverage it needs to negotiate effectively with content providers. For Netflix, this was not a problem under the DVD model. Netflix has something Pandora doesn’t in its trove of paying subscribers, but the Qwikster debacle showed that its customers are a price-conscious bunch. Any attempt to squeeze its viewers for more than $8 per month will likely send them running to Amazon’s a la carte offerings or to Redbox’s kiosks.
Foolish bottom line
Margins in its streaming segment continue to improve, but the gains Netflix makes in that area will be erased by the depletion of its DVD subscribers. Like Pandora, it’s easy to like the service, but the nature of the business doesn’t seem to justify its current valuation. With international losses racking up and DVD subscribers dwindling, it may be curtains for Netflix shares once again.
The article Netflix’s Horror-Flick Sequel originally appeared on Fool.com and is written by Jeremy Bowman.
Jeremy Bowman has no position in any stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool recommends Amazon.com and Netflix. The Motley Fool owns shares of Amazon.com and Netflix.
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