Total revenue rose to $5.77 billion from $4.52 billion. Analysts
on average had expected $5.76 billion.
Netflix
Inc on Tuesday reported a surge in new sign-ups as audiences stayed in their
homes to help fight the novel coronavirus and binged on series such as
"Tiger King," but the company predicted a weaker second half of the
year if quarantine orders are lifted.
The world's largest streaming service gained 15.8 million paying customers in the first three months of the year, bringing its global total to 182.9 million at the end of March. That nearly doubled the average Wall Street expectation of nearly 8 million, according to FactSet.
The company
warned, however, that it expected fewer new customers from July to December
compared with a year earlier.
Many people who
would have joined then are likely to have already signed up, executives said.
"We expect
viewing to decline and membership growth to decelerate as home confinement
ends," Netflix said in a letter to shareholders.
Shares of Netflix
rose 1.2 per cent to $439 in after-hours trading.
The company is
among the few businesses to benefit from government orders imposed in March to
keep people in isolation amid the coronavirus threat. While the S&P 500
Index has fallen 19 per cent from its Feb. 19 record high, Netflix has gained
11 per cent during the same period. Netflix also issued a bullish forecast that
it would add 7.5 million new customers for the current quarter, which ends in
June, though the company said it was "mostly guesswork" given
uncertainty over when stay-at-home orders might be lifted. Analysts surveyed by
FactSet had expected 3.8 million.
For the just-ended
quarter, Netflix's earnings per share fell short of analyst expectations. The
company posted diluted earnings per share of $1.57, below the $1.65 consensus,
according to IBES data from Refinitiv.
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