Motley Fool Money - Netflix, Comcast, Southwest Airlines
Episode Date: January 26, 2023If you attempted to fly Southwest Airlines over the holidays, you're not going to be surprised by their latest earnings results. (0:20) Tim Beyers discusses: - Southwest's $220 million loss - Why the... airline has "a more fundamental problem" - Comcast's growing subscribers (and costs) in its streaming service, Peacock (11:00) Ricky Mulvey talks with Catie Peiper about Netflix's international expansion and programming strategy. Companies discussed: LUV, CMCSA, NFLX, WBD Host: Chris Hill Guests: Tim Beyers, Catie Peiper Producer: Ricky Mulvey Engineers: Rick Engdahl, Tim Sparks Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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We've got the latest in entertainment, airlines, and entertainment.
I know I said it twice.
It's just that kind of show today.
Motley Fool Money starts now.
I'm Chris Hill joining me today, Motleyful Senior Analyst, Tim Byers.
Thanks for being here.
Thanks for having me, Chris.
Partially caffeinated, ready to go.
Let's do the show so you can get fully caffeinated.
We're going to start with Southwest Airlines.
And let me just say that anyone who flew Southwest over the holiday,
or knows anyone who flew Southwest over the holidays.
It's probably not surprised by the fact that in the fourth quarter, Southwest Airlines posted a loss of $220 million because of the utter cluster that was that airline over the holidays.
And they're trying to write the ship, but the results are the results, Tim.
And this can't be a surprise to anyone whether they flew Southwestern.
I mean, Southwest should count itself lucky that it's not paying for trauma therapy for some of these people.
I mean, to be fair, 17,000 flights are to be more specific, 16,700 flights canceled.
Now, we know that numbers are bad.
The fourth quarter loss was compared to a $68 million profit during the same period in 2021.
You know, the revenue of $6.17 billion was up more than 22%.
But, I mean, this is, Southwest has a more fundamental problem.
Like, it's systems and the system failures that we saw help cause some real chaos.
And if you know anything about airlines, that even if you're not using the classic large airline hub and spoke system,
Southwest does not. It's a point-to-point. It's a point-to-point airline.
Still, when flights start getting canceled, the chaos backs up and things back up very, very quickly, and that's what happened here.
Now, the good news here, Chris, is that Southwest is forecasting better results coming for the current quarter.
The booking trends are up and apparently look positive.
You know, projecting first quarter revenue to be up 20 to 24 percent over last year with capacity up 10 percent.
and capacity is essentially meaning how many seats we have to sell.
So Southwest is forecasting that it can handle an increased level of demand.
So theoretically, that means, Chris, that they have invested to fix some of these system problems they have,
the fundamental IT problems they have.
I mean, I think we all hope so because we're going to have spring travel upcoming here.
But my message from this, Chris, is I think it could have been a lot worse.
but these numbers are not surprising.
It could have been worse, and I think you're absolutely right to key in on sort of the next thing
investors should be watching is, well, what does this spring break season look like specifically
for airlines in general, but specifically for Southwest? There's a version of the future where they
come out two months from now and update their guidance for the current quarter.
But, you know, the type of systemic change that needs to happen at this business, it seems like is not going to necessarily happen quickly.
No.
Like if part of the problem here is we have an antiquated booking system that makes it really hard to handle these types of incidents, you know, that's the kind of thing that takes time and money to replace.
No doubt. And because there are some calcified systems, like airlines have this.
Airlines have some hardened systems that are in place. They have labor contracts. They have fuel costs that they do not control.
So there are some things that are calcified that Southwest has no control over. But to your point, the thing they do have some control over is how they forecast and how they handle those bookings and how they factor in the changes they need to make to that booking.
system. So you would hope that the guidance is modest coming into the next quarter, but I would be
very cautious here because the things that they don't control, for example, fuel costs, those are
unlikely to be going down anytime soon. So I would rather be pleasantly surprised and by after I'd
seen the stock rally a little bit more on business news that actually made me feel good that things
we're moving in the right direction rather than sort of try to go bottom fishing here.
I don't feel good about bottom fishing with Southwest Airlines, Chris.
Let's move on to Comcast then, because fourth quarter profits and revenue came in higher than
expected for Comcast.
Peacock, their streaming service, is up to 20 million subscribers, although I will point out
with the higher subscriber number we also saw in this later quarter higher losses in the Peacock
Division. Much higher. I mean, so revenue increase was up to about 6% to 9.9 billion. That was for the NBC
Universal Division, but the Peacock business, the adjusted earnings fell more than 36%. And Peacock had a loss,
an adjusted loss of, I'm sorry, NBC Universal of 978 million. Peacock's losses were,
were extraordinary. Now, to be fair, what seems to be happening is NBC Universal is scaling
up that business, investing heavily. And I'm sure they had to pay a pretty hefty premium
for having broadcast, at least on their Spanish language channels like Telemundo. The FIFA World
Cup. And the World Cup was pretty popular, and it was an incredible tournament.
out in Qatar.
But also, I mean, the Premier League is getting more and more popular.
So Premier League football, you know, over in England is getting more and more popular.
I'm sure that contract is going to get more and more expensive.
So, I mean, my takeaway on this, Chris, is my, you know, me and the spending that I have on sports ball is going up.
I'm going to have to pay a little bit more to watch some sports ball here.
But overall, Comcast as a business, I think it's interesting.
I mean, they did lose 26,000 broadband subscribers during the period,
and some of that was due to the impact of the hurricane, Hurricane Ian.
But, you know, their earnings did decline about 5%.
But this is, it's certainly not a terrible business.
I would say it's a business that is investing.
the broadband decline is a little bit concerning.
Peacock is going to be the one to watch here,
just like with all of these streaming services.
And to be fair to Comcast, Brian Roberts and his team,
I think, have done a good job of forecasting the investments they've been making.
You know, this loss is large.
This loss is not out of line with what they had previously forecast
in terms of the losses they were projecting for Peacom.
in 2022, and they say that they expect that to, those losses to peak this year. Now, if you and I are
sitting here 12 months from now, and that narrative has changed for the worse, then I think what
you're talking about gets even more dire for Comcast. But right now, this is, you know, say what
you want about the overall business or different divisions within the Comcast Empire. None of this
should be a surprise to investors. No, it shouldn't be. And the signaling here is that as Comcast ramps
up these investments, if we follow the signals, Netflix had a price increase and introduce an ad
tier. Disney Plus has introduced a price increase. It follows that Peacock is going to get more
expensive. Maybe at the ad-free tier, maybe they start there and add some additional
subscription pricing there.
But it wouldn't surprise me if, say,
like the ad tier, which is presently
$4.99 a month, goes up to say
like $6.99 a month.
It's just
it's trending this way,
but they have to
capture the subscribers first. So yes,
I agree with you. Brian Roberts
has been very clear about
the forecasting here and the investment
required, but
look for, you know,
Comcast sooner rather
than later to start leveraging the footprint that it's growing here.
20 million subscribers.
Now it's the next step is to start raising some prices, steadily, maybe not aggressively.
It's also going to be interesting to see what they do with the 2024 Summer Olympics,
which I will just add they have already started promoting on NBC, watching the playoff
football, whatever game was on NBC.
there are summer Olympics. We're a year and a half away and they're already promoting them,
as they should, by the way. Just start signaling that now. And maybe that becomes an opportunity
where there's a version of Peacock or maybe it just drive subscribers or maybe there's a more
premium version that, you know, for people who are hardcore Olympic fans. There's no doubt that's
going to happen. I mean, Peacock has a very vibrant set of, particularly in sports. Like,
They have premium sports programming for the NFL related to Sunday night football during the NFL season.
They have premium programming for the Premier League.
And to your point, when they held the Fan Fest, the Premier League fan fest just last weekend,
they had who Olympic sprinter, Noel Liles, pick his favorite Premier League football team.
So are they promoting the Olympics?
Yes, in fact they are, Chris.
Shout out to Alexandria's own, Noah Miles.
Always a fan.
Tim Byers, great talking to you.
Thanks for being here.
Thanks, Chris.
Netflix added 7.7 million subscribers in its latest quarter, meaning Reed Hastings is leaving
his job as co-CEO on a high note.
But is this streaming giant making some long-term missteps?
Ricky Mulvey caught up with the Motley Fool's Katie Piper to talk about the company's
international expansion, and it's less than forgiving programming strategy.
I mean, I'm a fan of TV. I work in TV. I watch everybody's things. People have very different
tastes, and I have no disdain for whatever those things are. What is quality? What is good versus not?
That's all subjective. I just want to super serve the audience. That came from Netflix's chief
content officer, Bella Bajaria, in an excellent piece in The New Yorker by Rachel Seim.
Katie Piper, that is just one example that leads me to ask the question. Has Netflix changed?
or lost its way?
Excellent question.
Great to be here talking with you again.
I think that the better question is, has Netflix changed their goal from being sort of a cultural
leader in the space to being a profit engine, which is more in line with what a lot of the
other streamers like Amazon Prime have really always set their identity around.
So is Netflix kind of becoming more like other streamers and less of this?
this industry-leading cultural example that it has been?
It's surprise we're doing TV again because the content officer has been dunked on by, I think,
Twitter and a number of people.
But I mean, she's done a, she came from the reality show, brought reality shows essentially
properly to streaming.
Before that, she was responsible for essentially getting the rights to shows like the Mindy
project, working with creators like Michael Schur.
So she has a deep understanding of the landscape and was also perhaps being reflective of the
audience versus herself.
So I want to give Bella some credit.
But I think there is a lot of worry with Netflix that now they're starting to raise prices.
They're cracking down on password sharing.
The days of hypergrowth are over.
So you have to look in the corners for spare change, if you will.
Yeah.
I mean, we're seeing that reflected at Netflix across the board.
There's been a lot of internal memos leaked in the last year about how they've updated their language around,
not guaranteeing that they won't lower, you know, take salary cuts to certain employees during
tough times. That used to be something they explicitly said they wouldn't do. They also just
have gone through numbers of layoffs in the past year, including de-staffing their to dumb website,
their fan streaming website, which had only just launched right before they did their layoffs. So
there does seem to be a very important pivot that they're making. I think the thing to underline is that this may not
be bad news for investors. And that's probably what everyone at, you know, the C-suite level at
Netflix is thinking about because all of these things are intended to grow their revenue line and
their profits. But we don't actually have that yet. And, you know, the flip side that I was like
to think about is many investors are also Netflix customers. And we're already feeling the pinch
of higher subscription costs or getting ads if we select the ad tier instead. So we're already
feeling the changes of a service that we've grown to build our lives around in many cases,
but have not necessarily seen that increase in profits.
Yeah, that's interesting that you bring it up.
It's not like a company like HICO, which is building very specialized replacement parts for
aircrafts where the investors aren't necessarily buying the product.
But with Netflix, that's got to be a case where I'm sure they're getting enough voice or
they're getting plenty of voices and opinions over the cancellations and the way that they've
been handling content.
I mean, I think one big complaint that I've heard and that I think can make sense, though,
is that Netflix is making this big push into international expansion and at the same time possibly
leaving behind their American consumer, which is their richest customer base.
And that might hurt them in the long term, especially as people are more prone to jump
between different streamers.
Yeah.
And there's an argument to be made on both sides.
I think if we let history kind of lead by example, two good streaming examples that have
already done this and moved back from it are Amazon Prime and HBO, who had also pursued aggressive
international expansion and are now scaling back to look more specifically at core markets like
Germany, the UK, Japan, where they can penetrate more deeply. So much more of a deep penetration
in specific markets as opposed to a broad penetration, which Netflix is in over 190 markets,
I believe at this point. So it's very spread thin at the moment. One thing that I do think is interesting,
though, that a lot of other streamers are not doing is Netflix is still pushing very hard to invest in
India, which is not a place that other streamers are focusing on and where if you were to look at the
numbers, you wouldn't necessarily see the reason why. But I think they're doubling down that if they
can unlock that market, that's huge. That's a huge potential market. And they may be willing to take
second or third or even fourth place in American markets if it means that they can unlock India
instead. I think that's, is it the largest population? I'll have to Google that. I think it just
surpassed China, though. I could be wrong. But on the topic of innovation, I think there is an art,
like we're seeing more reality shows that have different essentially countries that they're based
off of. Like, love is blind as one example where you have an American version, French version,
Japanese version. I don't want to admit why I know that off the top of my head. But there is,
There is this idea, though, that Netflix has lost some of the, it's innovative backbone,
and it's kind of reverting to the mean in terms of mediocrity. We're not going to try something new.
Let's just put that 70s show on again as that 90s show.
Yeah, I mean, I think you've really put your thumb on what is the most concrete shift in terms of how they program.
Historically, we think of Netflix as being that company that has really leaned on their access to user data to lead the kind of shows that they innovate.
House of Cards is a really prime example of that.
They knew that their users were tapping and binging dark and gritty shows and political dramas.
And they said, hey, we're going to produce our own that mirrors this user data that we're seeing.
And they've done this with other things.
Stranger Things is also another show that they used a lot of that user data to help ideate around.
And it's resulted in a lot of great headlines, Emmys, but not necessarily revenue.
Netflix is always very tight-lipped about how many subscribers they're actually generating around these shows.
And anecdotally, there's usually a lot of stories of people who will temporarily subscribe to binge it,
maybe catch up on anything else that they've been meaning to get out of the way that's still on Netflix,
and then they'll unsubscribe again.
And they just sort of rotate through.
This is something that a lot of streamers are dealing with, but it would be something that Netflix is considering.
if they're thinking about do we invest in this expensive original content that we produce
versus traditionally the much cheaper option, which is go buy something to license that has
already been produced in a different country and bring it over. And that's what we saw with
Squid Game. A research firm called Antenna to put some numbers behind behind the claim.
55% of Netflix subscribers ended up canceling their account within a six-month window,
which I found that's surprising, but I guess makes more sense as you start to have more option.
options. We're talking before, and you brought this up, that the metrics that Netflix uses,
well, I should say in my opinion, the metrics that Netflix uses to keep and cancel shows
may have some faults to it. It's a 28-day viewing period that determines essentially if you
live or die as a show on Netflix. And yet, many of the shows that they found to be the most
successful, thinking of The Office, thinking of Friends, that 70 show, or not that, that
70 show, but rather, let's say the office in Seinfeld, if you use that measure of how many people
watch this show within a 28-day period, when it first premiered, those shows would have been dead
in the water. So I wonder if that ends up discouraging innovation and creates, I wonder if they
end up having more missed opportunities because of that very short decision cycle.
Excellent point. Notably, both of actually all three of the shows that you referenced did not
get produced by Netflix. They now just are restrained through Netflix. And so Netflix didn't
have to absorb any of the risk behind those shows. Not anymore. And I'm saying that, like,
that's what made those shows successful. Yeah. Okay, sorry. Yeah, no, no, but I would agree. And I would
say that, you know, what is difficult about that. And, you know, it's similar to what other streaming
services are offering their shows by HBO. For one, they're looking at completion rate. What percentage
of viewers completed watching the entire show? And then that will help them determine what gets renewed.
it is there's a lot of critics out there that say that this is leading towards mediocrity and also towards
companion viewing as a behavior so companion viewing is when you just put a show on in the background
and then you're working you're on your phone maybe you're cleaning or cooking so it's something that
you can pay attention to get distracted from come back to you haven't really missed a beat
versus really intense viewing i would argue house of cards is one of those where you really
didn't want to miss a beat and so you had to invest the time
time and energy to thoroughly watch it. And I think their data right now between completion
rate, it's easier to complete a companion viewing show, a time investment show, and also the
number of subscribers and viewers they have is leading towards that companion viewing programming.
Katie Piper, anything else you want to chat about with Netflix or should we end it here?
You know, I just am going to say, I still keep my Netflix subscription because every time I get tired of it,
They come up with something new, like just at the very 11th hour.
So we'll see where it goes.
What's the old AM radio caller thing?
I hate the program and I listen every day.
Katie Piper, always great chatting with you and appreciate your time.
Thank you.
As always, people on the program may have interest in the stocks they talk about,
and the Motley Fool may have formal recommendations for or against,
so don't buy yourself stocks based solely on what you hear.
I'm Chris Hill. Thanks for listening. We'll see you tomorrow.
