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Netflix To Raise $2 Billion In Debt To Fund More Original Content (techcrunch.com)

According to a press release posted today, Netflix is planning to raise $2 billion to help fund new content, including "content acquisitions, production and development, capital expenditures, investments, working capital and potential acquisitions and strategic transactions." TechCrunch reports: The funds will be raised in the form of senior unsecured notes, denominated in U.S. dollars and euros, it said. This debt offering is the sixth time in under four years that Netflix is raising $1 billion or more through bonds, noted Variety, which was among the first to report the news. As of September 30, Netflix's long-term debt had reached $8.34 billion, up 71% from $4.89 billion in the year ago quarter, it said during its last earnings, Variety's report also noted. Netflix recently explained during its Q3 2018 earnings that it needs to continue to invest in original programming in order to remain competitive. "Content companies such as WarnerMedia and Disney/Fox are moving to self-distribute their own content; tech firms like Apple, Amazon and others are investing in premium content to enhance their distribution platforms," the letter also stated. "Amid these massive competitors on both sides, plus traditional media firms, our job is to make Netflix stand out so that when consumers have free time, they choose to spend it with our service," it had said.

16 of 122 comments (clear)

  1. Re:This is my stop. by CohibaVancouver · · Score: 3, Funny

    I'm much happier to watch 30 episodes of "Narcos" than two hours of "Hot Tub Time Machine 2."

  2. Maybe they could finish by bobstreo · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Forever

    or

    Terminator: The Sarah Conner Chronicles

    I see they're doing the new season of Lucifer...

    I'd also like a sequel to Bright

    Just say no to more movies from Adam Sandler though.

    1. Re:Maybe they could finish by rtb61 · · Score: 2

      Don't forget really cheap to produce content, like scenery channel lopped from various locations with generic music. Then various music video channels, again buy cheap early and loop over and over again.

      People will pick the one the fills the most spots with the most content. Fuck sports that is for jock strap douche failures and with mind control levels of advertising, your sports stars, your team, the play for you, yeah fuck off, the mostly are jock strap douche fwits that chase the highest money and seeking to be masturbated by as many people as possible, hey morons, prostitutes get paid and you idiots pay.

      Producing your own content is smart and there is a lot out there to produce. Autotune et al has completely fucked up modern music with real generic celebration of narcissism crap and shallow worthless performance artists who know nothing about music, so there is a lot of scope there (simply advertise for bands and create videos, one time payment).

      Content creators of course do not want exclusive, it is death, they become unknowns outside of that subscription serves because there is no longer an advertising channel, free to air, to push their content out. Content creators want their content on all the subscription services because that is the only way to get known. Free to air with its endless shitvertising model is dying, along with corporate propaganda news, the main ways to waffle shit about pseudo celebrities and stars, yeah narcissist with egos as big as entire suns, what a pack of fwits. So will Netflic release content to other subscription services, probably on an exchange basis, we give two seasons of what ever for one season of what ever.

      Big money is sport is coming to an end, they have lost the saturation marketing hook, getting children to believe in utter bullshit sporting heroes, heroes my arse.

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    2. Re:Maybe they could finish by AmiMoJo · · Score: 2

      The whole idea with Netflix is that they should be able to make better quality programming by relying on the long tail for viewing, and not having to worry about the whims of advertisers. Otherwise what is the point, it's just the same drek as other streaming services.

      I'd love to see some really good documentaries, like the BBC used to make in the 70s/80s. Informative and in-depth, none of this Brian Cox gazing at the sky and breathlessly whispering about how amazing it all is. Making a Murderer was pretty good, as was that thing about OJ.

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  3. Re:Long term debt .. am I missing something here? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Is it a bad thing? It depends.

    If I borrow and spend a billion dollars now, and get back $1.2 billion in a year from the things I spent the money on, the borrowing was a good thing: I made more money by borrowing the money and spending it than I would have had I not, and I'm in a position to pay back the debt if I want to. (Or maybe I can re-invest that money into other things and hope for more high returns.)

    If I borrow and spend a billion dollars now, and get back just that one billion dollars over the course of five years, I've lost money: the interest cost of the borrowings is higher than the return.

    Netflix is gambling that the content they'll spend the money on will bring in more revenue - courtesy of higher subscription numbers - than the cost of the borrowing to produce that content. They've probably done all sorts of projections and estimates to give them a reasonable degree of assurance in that gamble, but ultimately, it's a gamble. If the bet pays off, they'll get more subscribers, and the money to pay off those loans (and then some). If they don't, they're going to be in trouble - either they'll have to raise equity (offer new stock to bring in cash to pay off the loans, diluting existing shareholders), or they'll have to roll over the debt (finding some way to service that debt), or they go bankrupt.

    Evaluating all of this is made harder because it depends on their cash flow in the future, not their cash flow right now. If they produce quality content that draws in the subscribers, it can turn around their cash flow from negative to positive (assuming that's the current situation; I'm not an investor in the company, so I'm not paying close attention to their cash flow.) If they don't, well...

    But in any event, given that the days of cheap and easy content by licensing old content are gone, they don't have much choice. Either they produce their own content, or they go under - no content means no subscribers. If the content doesn't work, they'll go under, just a little bit slower than they otherwise would have.

  4. One Remaining Movie in Every Categtory by BrendaEM · · Score: 2

    Nextflix has done everything in their power to go out of business. They devised a bogus rating system. They are doing away with reviews altogether. They put movies in categories where they don't belong. There are fewer movies, now. There are hardly any cult moves, hardly any classics. They've alienated studios by creating their own content.

    What more can they do and still keep the lights on?

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  5. Re:Long term debt .. am I missing something here? by sexconker · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The core problem is Netflix's original content costs grow without bounds the more successful it is. Netflix's subscriber count is asymptotic.

    The more popular a Netflix series is, the more it costs to continue it for another "season". The same goes for the movies & sequels. Actors, writers, etc. tend to point to the success of a past project and demand a bigger paycheck to churn out another.

    In the old model, success yields ticket sales, ad dollars, toy sales, etc. In Netflix's model, success yields nothing. The people who made it a success by watching it are already subscribed. You don't get more money for a second "season" or a sequel. Nor do you get more money by developing other content they might like, because their single subscription gives them everything. Nor do you get ad dollars since there are no ads.

    Once you hit a certain point where everyone interested in Netflix has Netflix (or has a friend with Netflix), putting out MORE Netflix or BETTER Netflix doesn't generate more money.

    In the long run, Netflix will have to run ads, charge a premium for certain content, stretch releases of "seasons" out over time (they're doing this with certain things already), keep increasing subscription costs, or some combination thereof.

  6. Enjoy while it Lasts by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Their content is great but their business model is beginning to look something like a Ponzi scheme. They have to borrow more and more in order to make more new content to both attract new subscribers and maintain their existing ones. However, at some point, they will no longer be able to increase their subscription base fast enough to cover their ever-increasing debt at which point things are going to get very bad very fast as they will haemorrhage subscribers like crazy.

    They really need to find a way to pay for the new content from our subscriptions. I would much rather have a lower rate of quality shows over the next 30 years than a huge glut of new material for a few years followed by nothing because their business model has imploded.

  7. I can see it working but ... by your_mother_sews_soc · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I can see it working but it's a big gamble. In a nutshell there are a few categories of funds needed by a business: startup costs (building, enhancements, equipment, etc), fixed costs (your monthly bills including payroll, utilities, service contracts, etc.), and variable costs (depends on the interest, but here it would be the costs to make a film or series - the more films/series, the more it costs). The revenue then goes against these expenses, and there's a break even point where you make X number of widgets and take in enough revenue (from sales, licensing, etc.) to cover the costs.

    You would think that Netflix has saturated the market by now, so how does throwing more money at content generate more revenue? Netflix has obviously done some thinking.

    More original content would mean less licensing films and TV shows from other companies. And they need a bootstrap to produce enough to begin to be free of other studios and distributors. But then where do we go for all the shows that brought us to Netflix? Maybe it's Plan B.
    br/> Original content is still key, but perhaps Netflix knows about other markets, like PPV. I don't have any idea how much people pay for films that were recently in theaters and are now in PPV. It could be that Netflix wants to do more films that are either screened broadly or maybe limited run and then charge a few more bucks to watch them.

    Whatever they do it's a lot of money and a big risk. The markets are not looking favorably at tech right now, either. I'd be cautious.

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  8. Re:Long term debt .. am I missing something here? by AvitarX · · Score: 3, Insightful

    HBO does fine with the model of subscription only.

    They seem to be way better at picking winners than Netflix is, and they spend far less on content, but it's definitely a sustainable business model if run well.

    It'll be interesting to see if Netflix's model of tons and tons of mediocre content works. I'm not sure it will, because the whole season release model means people aren't so much in sync and therefore shows are less discussed and less of a cultural phenomenon even when they are great (and sone are).

    If GoT was on Netflix for example, everyone would be totally out of sync, and there'd be a lot less talking about it, which in turn makes it harder to turn a great show into subs.

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  9. Re:This is my stop. by Freischutz · · Score: 3

    I'm much happier to watch 30 episodes of "Narcos" than two hours of "Hot Tub Time Machine 2."

    Indeed. The original content is the only thing that makes Netflix worthwhile. Everything else I can watch for free on Amazon Prime.

    Apart from a few of their original content shows that either get cancelled half way through for some mysterious reason or are onlyupdated at a glacial pace, Amazon Prime is a huge pile of garbage. This streaming industry fragmentation is not helping anybody, I'm not signing up for, and paying a subscription to: WarnerMedia, Disney/Fox, Apple, Google, Hulu, HBO, YouTube, half a dozen local TV channels, etc. The more this market fragments into tons of separate players who all expect you to shell out a $20, 30, 50 subscription fee for access to their streaming gateway that gets you one new original content show and a handful of movies every couple of months the more likely I am to sign up to the one that has the most interesting stuff (in my case scifi) and pirate the rest of these bozos. Mind you, I might actually subscribe to YouTube if It meant finally getting rid of the damn commercials which should concern the other streaming services if users feel they actually get more value out of watching other users unbox stuff, making their cats do tricks or show you how to paint strip antique furniture than they do signing up to the Disney/Fox streaming gateway and watching their over hyped MPAA censored movies and shows.

  10. Not a Ponzi Scheme by rsilvergun · · Score: 2

    they need a back catalog to keep subs. As everyone and their dog jumps into the streaming services market Netflix needs their own content.

    As for, why debt, the answer is taxes. They'll write it off as a business expense.

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  11. I don't think they need adverts by rsilvergun · · Score: 3, Interesting

    but they do need content, not to get new subscribers but to keep the old ones. You need a series of shows you can either go back to or discover. It's not even that big a deal if they're not finished. My kid watched a ton of cheap, unfinished shows on DVD back in the day when she was laid up sick. But the point is to have enough content that folks want to keep the subscription.

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  12. Re: Huge Mistake! by MachineShedFred · · Score: 2

    Yeah, they should just force content owners to license to them... Somehow...

    It's not Netflix's fault that every content studio under the sun tanks their licensing in order to give their own streaming operation a go. It does suck for us though - no way I'm subscribing to that useability and payment nightmare.

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  13. Re:This is my stop. by volodymyrbiryuk · · Score: 2

    You can cancel at any moment though. So basically you can cycle trough all the streaming services as they publish new content. But yeah the fragmentation is taking us back to the TV era.

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  14. Re:This is my stop. by CohibaVancouver · · Score: 2

    The problem with Netflix is the licensing mess. Last time I bothered to keep a subscription they really didn't have that much stuff.

    I know I'm not really a typical Slashdotter (I have kids and a fairly busy life outside of the home) - The notion of sitting at home watching six hours of TV is foreign to me. Nevertheless, whenever someone says Netflix "doesn't really have that much stuff" it blows my mind. To me, the library of "stuff" on Netflix is HUGE. The notion that I wouldn't be able to find something to watch is mind-blowing (and that's just little old Canadian Netflix).