Connect with us

Business

Netflix to raise prices as new subscribers soar

Published

on

Netflix will raise prices across a number of countries after adding nearly 19 million subscribers in the final months of 2024.
The streaming firm said it will increase subscription costs in the US, Canada, Argentina and Portugal.
Asked if prices were set to increase in the UK, a spokesperson for Netflix said there was “nothing to share right now”.
Netflix announced better-than-expected subscriber numbers, helped by the second series of South Korean drama Squid Game as well as sports including a boxing match between influencer-turned-fighter Jake Paul and former world heavyweight champion Mike Tyson.
In the US, prices will increase across almost all plans including the standard subscription with no adverts which will now cost $17.99 (£14.60) a month, up from $15.49.
Its membership with adverts will also rise, by one dollar to $7.99.
The last time Netflix raised prices in the US was October 2023, when it also lifted costs for some plans in the UK.
“We will occasionally ask our members to pay a little more so that we can re-invest to further improve Netflix,” it said.
Meanwhile, the company said it finished last year with more than 300 million subscribers in total. It had been expected to add 9.6 million new subscribers between October and December but far surpassed that number.
It is the last time that Netflix will report quarterly subscriber growth – from now on it said it will “continue to announce paid memberships as we cross key milestones”.
As well as Squid Game and the Paul v Tyson fight, Netflix also streamed two NFL games on Christmas Day.
It will also broadcast more live events including WWE wrestling and has bought the rights for the FIFA Women’s World Cup in 2027 and 2031.
Paolo Pescatore, a technology analyst at PP Foresight, said Netflix “is now flexing its muscles by adjusting prices given its far stronger and diversified programming slate compared to rivals”.
Net profit between October and December doubled to $1.8bn compared to the same period a year ago.
Sales rose from $8.8bn to $10.2bn.

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Business

An industrial Chinatown near the US southern border readies its options should Trump tariffs come

Published

on

By

The huge industrial park sprawls across the rural landscape with row upon row of warehouse-sized manufacturing units. Logos and signs plastered with red and gold — lucky colors in Chinese tradition — brighten the otherwise gray exteriors while aromas of Peking duck come from an on-site canteen.

But this development is thousands of miles from Beijing or Shanghai — and just a few hours’ drive from the Texas border, in northern Mexico.

Continue Reading

Business

No, Trump did not become an overnight ‘crypto billionaire’

Published

on

By

President Donald Trump’s meme coin may be a textbook cash grab — not unlike his $60 made-in-China Bibles and his $400 gold sneakers — but it’s not the kind of venture that can catapult his wealth into the stratosphere.

Some news outlets reported an absolute melt-up in Trump’s net worth over the weekend, and those figures have run wild on social media. Respectfully, though, you have to squint really hard and swallow a giant red crypto pill to conclude that the president’s net worth suddenly shot up 800% on the back of a digital asset that is functionally useless (more on that in a moment).

He’s still a billionaire, to be sure, but a single-digit one — hundreds of billions of dollars away from the levels of the wannabe tech oligarchs who surrounded him at Monday’s inauguration.

Continue Reading

Business

Today’s CEOs are the last to manage all-human workforces, says Marc Benioff

Published

on

By

Today’s chief executives are the last generation to manage all-human workforces as companies increasingly adopt artificial intelligence, Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff said Thursday.

“From this point forward… we will be managing not only human workers but also digital workers,” he said on a panel at the annual meeting of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.

Benioff provided a recent example from his own business.

He said Salesforce’s software had been used to help run the annual conference in Davos for more than a decade. But this year, for the first time, the San Francisco-based tech giant incorporated an “AI agent” into its app for Davos attendees to help them decide which panels to attend.

Continue Reading

Trending