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Netflix to Refocus on Ads, Content after Failed Warner Bros Bid

April 15 (Reuters) - Investors will look for Netflix to emphasize content spending and ad business growth as key ​drivers when it reports quarterly earnings on Thursday, marking ‌the streaming giant's first results since its failed bid for Warner Bros Discovery.

Buying Warner Bros would have handed Netflix a clutch of prized franchises including "Game of ​Thrones" and "Friends" without the costly effort of building out its own.

Instead, ​the company will face tougher competition from a combined Warner ⁠Bros and Paramount Skydance, if that proposed $110 billion deal closes.

  • Netflix ​is expected to report a 15.5% increase in revenue to $12.18 billion in ​the first quarter, with $634 million coming from advertising, according to analysts polled by LSEG.

  • The company raised U.S. prices in March, which some analysts say could lead it ​to raise its full-year revenue forecast.

  • The price increase could also nudge ​more users towards its ad-supported tier, whose revenue remains small.

  • Netflix shares have gained 13% so far ‌this ⁠year, with the stock up about 26% since the company walked away from the $72 billion Warner Bros deal.

  • Investors now expect Netflix to refocus on sports and other live events as it looks to boost ad revenue.

  • "We're kind ​of entering another ​phase for the ⁠ad business, where they are becoming one of the largest scaled global advertising platforms," said John Belton, ​portfolio manager at Gabelli Funds, which owns Netflix ​shares.

  • The company ⁠expanded its live programming slate during the quarter, highlighted by a concert by K-pop supergroup BTS streamed from Seoul that drew 18.4 million viewers worldwide, ⁠as ​well as the 2026 World Baseball Classic, ​which became the most streamed baseball game globally.

Reporting by ​Harshita Mary Varghese and Kritika Lamba in Bengaluru; Editing by Pooja Desai

Source: Reuters


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