| Netflix reports earning after the bell today. 
 Netflix earnings: Analysts make key shift as stock tests record peak
 
 Netflix shares nudged higher Thursday ahead of the streaming  group's  second-quarter earnings report, set for after the closing bell, with  investors focused on the revenue impact of its new ad-supported  offering.
 
 Netflix  ( NFLX)  is  undergoing the biggest revamp of its TV streaming app in more than a  decade to try to keep its 270 million subscribers engaged for longer  periods. It also wants Wall Street to focus on how satisfied its  customers are more than how many subscribers the company brings in.
 
 The  group will stop reporting quarterly subscriber gains next year, having  already dumped its regular forecasts for quarterly additions. It's  looking to wring more cash from its lower-priced plans, which show ads  within its streaming content.
 
 Netflix in fact told investors in  May that its ad-supported tier, which costs around $6.99 a month, topped  40 million active users that month, up from just 5 million over the  year-earlier month.
 
 Still, Wall Street at present remains focused on subscriber  additions. Analysts expect Netflix brought in a net 4.82 million new  users over the three months ended in June, a tally that would be the  smallest in more than a year.
 
 Netflix pushing into live events
 
 That's  still likely to help drive revenue 16% above the year-earlier quarter,  however, to around $9.5 billion. Analysts also say the figure could rise  as high as $9.8 billion over the three months ending in September as  the group mulls new price increases to match recent moves by its  competitors.
 
 "In our view, recent price increases by competitors  and ongoing low rates of churn support Netflix price increases over  coming quarters," said KeyBanc Capital Markets analyst Justin Patterson,  who recently lifted his Netflix price target by $22 to $735 a share.  (Churn is the measure of subscribers switching to rival services.)
 
 "As pricing returns to a more normal cadence, we believe Netflix has  ample room to sustain more than 10% annual revenue growth with 2% to 3%  annual operating-margin expansion," he added.
 
 Netflix is also  looking to beef up its offerings of live programming, which are crucial  to the growth of advertising-based video on demand. These include the  addition of two National Football League games on Christmas Day and next  year's launch of WWE "Raw" wrestling events.
 
 In January Netflix  agreed to pay TKO Group Holdings $5 billion for the streaming rights to  "Raw," the WWE's flagship weekly wrestling program. Streaming is slated  to start in 2025.
 
 Emmy haul
 
 "Netflix’s still limited foray into live major  sports with Christmas NFL games complementing scripted WWE content and  successful behind the scenes efforts including Drive to Survive and  Break Point reinforces a view that streaming bundles will increasingly  emulate the traditional linear bundle," said Benchmark analyst Matthew  Harrigan.
 
 Original content has also been increasingly important  for Netflix, although its recent slate has been helped by shows that it  licenses from mainstream networks as well.
 
 Last  summer's strikes by both the the Writers Guild of America and the  Screen Actors Guild hit Netflix hard, ultimately reducing its overall  offering of TV and movie titles by around 15%, following at least a  decade of increases. Netflix now looks to be focusing on quality over  quantity.
 
 Netflix earned a total of 107 Emmy nominations this year for titles  including "The Crown," "The Bear" and the controversial series "Baby  Reindeer." Winners are slated to be announced Sept. 15.
 
 Netflix  shares were marked 0.36% higher in premarket trading to indicate an  opening bell price of $649.82 each. That move would extend the stock's  year-to-gain to around 33.5% and put it within touching distance of the  all-time peak of $697.49 it reached earlier this month.
 
 Link: finance.yahoo.com
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