New York, Dec 13 : Walt Disney gave a much needed boost to Netflix, becoming the first
major Hollywood studio to use the video service to bypass premium channels like
HBO that traditionally controlled the delivery of movies to TV
subscribers.
News of the deal, which enables Netflix to stream Disney's
first-run movies to its subscribers, boosted Netflix shares by 14
percent.
Liberty Media Corp, whose Starz group now distributes Disney
movies on TV, fell almost 5 percent.
Investors saw the Netflix-Disney
deal as an important endorsement of the DVD rental and streaming service, which
has been struggling with slowing subscriber growth and higher costs for content
distribution.
Disney movies will be available for streaming on Netflix
starting in 2016, after its current deal with Liberty Media's pay-TV channel
Starz expires. The deal is for both new Disney movies and library content such
as "Dumbo" and "Alice in Wonderland."
"An exclusive deal with Disney
differentiates the Netflix content from Hulu Plus and Amazon Instant Video,"
said Anthony DiClemente, an analyst with Barclays Capital.
But some
analysts worried that Netflix paid too much to get Disney's movies. Tony Wible,
an analyst with Janney Montgomery Scott, estimated in a report that Netflix paid
more than $350 million a year for Disney's movies and said "we would not be
surprised if (Netflix) would need to raise capital".
By comparison, HBO
agreed to pay an estimated $200 million annually in its so-called "output," or
movie licensing deal, with 20th Century Fox earlier this year, according to the
Los Angeles Times.
The deal gives Netflix streaming rights to movies from
Disney's live-action and animation studios, including those from Pixar, Marvel,
and the recently acquired Lucasfilm. On October 30, Disney announced a $4
billion deal to purchase the famed studio founded by George Lucas, which will
now make new episodes in the blockbuster "Star Wars" series.
"This deal
brings to our subscribers some of the highest quality, most imaginative family
films being made today," Ted Sarandos, Netflix's chief content officer, said in
a statement. "It's a leap forward for Internet television."
Movies from
Steven Spielberg's DreamWorks Studios are not included in the deal, as that
studio distributes its movies through CBS's Showtime on TV. Disney recently
signed a deal to distribute DreamWorks' films theatrically after the studio's
deal with Viacom's Paramount Pictures expired.
The deal allows Netflix to
stream Disney movies beginning seven to nine months after they appear in
theaters, as Starz does now under Disney's prior agreement. The deal does not
cover DVD rentals of Disney movies.
Disney said in November that it would
shut down its own video streaming service, Disney Movies Online, which had
failed to catch on with users. A message on the 'Disney Movies Online' website
said it would shut down on December 31.
Netflix, which started its
streaming business with mostly older films, has been moving to add more original
programming and produces TV shows such as "Lilyhammer," which stars "Sopranos"
actor Steven Van Zandt as an American gangster who starts a new life in Norway.
The company also struck a high-profile deal with actor Kevin Spacey for "House
of Cards."
The Disney pact follows similar deals Netflix has inked for
new films with smaller studios, including Relativity Media, The Weinstein
company and DreamWorks Animation.
The agreements have saddled Netflix
with nearly $5 billion in contractual commitments over the next three years for
deals its made for streaming content, the company said in a recent quarterly
earnings report.
Netflix's struggles over the last year, which have
included missed subscriber guidance, an ill-fated attempt to split the DVD and
streaming operations, and a swooning stock price, recently attracted the
attention of billionaire activist investor Carl Icahn.
Icahn disclosed in
regulatory filings on October 31 that he had amassed a nearly 10 percent stake
in the video company and suggested it should pursue a sale. Netflix responded by
adopting a poison pill defense.
Losing Disney's movies means Starz is
left with only Sony Pictures for film content. The pay-TV channel cast the
ending of its agreement with Disney as its decision, saying it preferred to use
the money for original programming creation.
Liberty Media's shares will
"rebound," said Vijay Jayant, an analyst with International Strategy and
Investment Group.
"We believe it was Starz' decision to remain prudent
and walk away from the bidding for Disney content," ISI said in a report,
estimating that it might have cost Starz $400 million to keep the
movies.
Without that expense, Starz can step up its production of
original series such as "Spartacus" and "Magic City," which ISI said have become
more valuable to cable operators anyway.
Netflix shares jumped $10.6491,
or 14 percent, to $86.6491. Liberty Media shares fell $5.49, or almost 5
percent, to $105.56.
Ends
SA/EN
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» Netflix to get Disney films in TV distribution deal
Netflix to get Disney films in TV distribution deal
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