Watch this: http://www.secform4.com/insider-trading/1065280.htm
He's loading $$ while things go sour.
He's loading $$ while things go sour.
Tobor said:And fast. The faster the better. Only 1 in 4 new subscribers is interested in discs at all. That's not going to improve over time. Sell it now while there's some value, and use that money to make content deals.
outunderthestars said:I switched over to Blockbuster this month, and I really like their service. Discs and games by mail, no upcharge on blu-ray or games, and I can swap them at a store for a new game/movie when the urge strikes.
Yeesh.nbcjr said:Watch this: http://www.secform4.com/insider-trading/1065280.htm
He's loading $$ while things go sour.
BertramCooper said:Posted it a couple of pages ago.
http://seekingalpha.com/article/294...-fall-and-why-its-prospects-are-getting-worse
Check the section entitled "Accounting manipulation and fraud?" And also the parts about the CFO resigning.
Once the Starz deal is up, I can't see myself keeping it.kr2t0s said:Just curious if anyone has actually cancelled their plan? Either streaming or DVD?
I finished a Larry Sanders rewatch and then I axed my streaming account. There just isn't even $8 of value in the library, especially if you're like us and already keep up with the television shows that you're interested in.BertramCooper said:Once the Starz deal is up, I can't see myself keeping it.
Now that you mention it, I think I might do an epic Doctor Who weekend marathon and then dump it.dead souls said:I finished a Larry Sanders rewatch and then I axed my streaming account. There just isn't even $8 of value in the library, especially if you're like us and already keep up with the television shows that you're interested in.
Having Mad Men and Breaking Bad is great if you haven't seen them, but since I have it's not really a selling point to me.
That's interesting, but it assumes they have any interest in truly keeping the DVD business around, and all signs point to them trying to kill it.faceless007 said:Don't think this has already been posted, but I read an interesting theory about the reason for this: Prior to this, Warner Bros. and other studios were blackmailing Netflix to buy their sucky rental-only DVDs with just the bare movie and no special features and 28 days after retail release, by holding the streaming rights hostage unless Netflix agreed to buy those DVDs. By splitting up the companies, Netflix can effectively render those clauses invalid by making the negotiations for streaming separate from negotiations for discs. So WB can't tell Netflix what versions of DVDs to stock on the condition of streaming rights.
Don't know how true that is but it's interesting.
that's one view of it, similar to the speculation that the studios are making Netflix pay for its disc only customers which supposedly Netflix can't afford. One could look at it from another point of view and see that as good for Netflix as it's a bargaining chip. I remember that when Netflix first accepted the 28 day delay for new releases some people saw it as a good deal because it meant more streaming rights. I don't think money itself is enough an incentive to movie studios.faceless007 said:Don't think this has already been posted, but I read an interesting theory about the reason for this: Prior to this, Warner Bros. and other studios were blackmailing Netflix to buy their sucky rental-only DVDs with just the bare movie and no special features and 28 days after retail release, by holding the streaming rights hostage unless Netflix agreed to buy those DVDs. By splitting up the companies, Netflix can effectively render those clauses invalid by making the negotiations for streaming separate from negotiations for discs. So WB can't tell Netflix what versions of DVDs to stock on the condition of streaming rights.
Don't know how true that is but it's interesting.
Netflix really doesn't want to tie their brand to individual shows (except perhaps the original content they're developing). They'd much rather have the customers see Netflix as an amorphous list of loads of movies and rely on the recommendation engine instead. Plus streaming rights for various shows are usually temporary or incomplete anyway. The studios are liable to fuck you over on a whim. Anyone remember last year when Apple had that big AppleTV reveal and was demoing the new rentals on the device showing off a bunch of moviesonly for those movies to mysteriously not be available a few days later? If even Apple gets dicked around on content rights then there's even less hope for netflix.Meier said:Good lord, it's down over $78 in the last 5 days. Reed has mentioned they'll be announcing more content soon.. but soon is too late. They needed to say what and when immediately after Starz pulled out.
They added Mad Men -- the most critically acclaimed show of the past decade easily and there was essentially no fanfare. That should have been shouted from the rooftops.. it should have been on commercials, etc. Their PR department is abyssmal.
I'm suprised more people weren't selling earlier. Apparently Netflix's P/E ratio was ridiculously high. A market correction was long overdue.nbcjr said:Watch this: http://www.secform4.com/insider-trading/1065280.htm
He's loading $$ while things go sour.
nbcjr said:Watch this: http://www.secform4.com/insider-trading/1065280.htm
He's loading $$ while things go sour.
Greyface said:Netflix really doesn't want to tie their brand to individual shows (except perhaps the original content they're developing). They'd much rather have the customers see Netflix as an amorphous list of loads of movies and rely on the recommendation engine instead.
JaggedSac said:If you knew your company was WAAAY overvalued, wouldn't you sell some too?