Netflix adds 13 million subscribers, extending its lead in streaming

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Netflix added more than 13 million subscribers during the fourth quarter, the company said Tuesday, extending its lead in the streaming video business.

The Los Gatos, Calif.-based streamer's subscriber growth beat analysts' estimates of nearly 8.7 million customer additions, according to polling by FactSet. It was the largest fourth-quarter growth in subscriber adds in the company's history, bringing its total subscribers to about 260 million, Netflix said.

The company reported revenue of $8.8 billion in the fourth quarter, up 12.5% from the same time a year earlier. Net income was $938 million, compared with $55 million in the fourth quarter of 2022. Netflix beat analyst expectations of $8.72 billion in revenue but missed on estimates of $990 million in net income, according to FactSet.

"We believe there is plenty of room for growth ahead as streaming expands, and our north star remains the same: to thrill members with our entertainment," Netflix said in a letter to shareholders on Tuesday. "If we can continue to improve Netflix faster than the competition, we’ll have an increasingly valuable business — for consumers, creators and shareholders."

Netflix earlier on Tuesday announced a major sports rights deal with WWE, bringing weekly pro wrestling show "Raw" exclusively to Netflix in the U.S., Canada, the United Kingdom, Latin America and other territories starting in January 2025. The streamer will also carry WWE shows and specials outside the U.S., including “SmackDown” and “NXT,” its live events like WrestleMania, as well as WWE documentaries and series in 2025.

Read more: WWE's 'Raw' will stream live on Netflix next year in major sports rights deal

The deal is for an initial 10 years with rights fees equaling more than $5 billion, with an option for Netflix to extend the agreement, according to a regulatory filing from TKO, the parent company of WWE.

Netflix stock closed at $492.19 a share, up 1%, and continued to increase about 8% in after-hours trading to $531.35 a share.

"The announcement is a coup for Netflix, in our view, given Raw's historical popularity," wrote John Blackledge, a TD Cowen managing director and senior research analyst, in a report. TD Cowen has an outperform rating on Netflix stock.

Netflix Co-Chief Executive Ted Sarandos in an earnings presentation said WWE "Raw" is in the "sweet spot" of its sports business, which is the "drama of sport," as opposed to day-to-day coverage of competitive athletics.