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 What's The Deal With Netflix?Is this the stream life? Is this just fantasy?
 Caught in a pandemic, let’s escape from reality. Open your  eyes, look up to the TV and see.
 
 I’m just a poor boy. I need no streaming.
 
 Great Ones, if you’ve followed  the Netflix (Nasdaq: NFLX) saga for the past couple of months, you  know that gains are easy come, easy go. And NFLX stock has gone from little  high to little low … seemingly because of how the wind blows.
                 |  |   Since hitting an all-time high of about $701  in October, NFLX stock has plummeted more than 45% — quite literally erasing  all of Netflix’s pandemic gains.
 I mean, NFLX is  trading near levels not seen since early March 2020, right before the pandemic lockdowns  in the U.S.
 
 Any way the wind  blows, indeed. Nearly two years’ worth of gains … poof, gone … in just a  matter of weeks.
 
 So, what exactly  happened to NFLX?
 
 Why did everything  come crashing down so quickly?
 
 And … today’s  biggest question: Why did Bill Ackerman’s Pershing Square hedge fund just drop roughly $1 billion on 3.1 million NFLX  shares?
 
 Pitter patter, let’s  get at’er!
   
 Bubble, Bubble, Netflix In Trouble    |  |   Netflix’s initial descent began  with a bit of profit-taking back in October 2021. NFLX stock was at an all-time  high, and investors who rode the pandemic rocket were looking to bank some  profits. 
 And then something  weird happened. Wall Street started to realize that the pandemic wouldn’t last  forever.
 
 To you and me, that statement — the pandemic won’t last forever —  seems like common sense. It should’ve already been factored into NFLX’s stock  price, right?
 
 Well, it was, and  it wasn’t. Wall Street knew that pandemic-level subscriber growth wasn’t  sustainable. Netflix CEO Reed Hastings made that abundantly clear in every  single earnings report since the beginning of the pandemic.
 
 But, somehow, Wall  Street investors were more than happy to wear rose-colored glasses about the  whole thing … completely forgetting or outright ignoring what was bound to  happen once the world started opening up again.
 
 And what, exactly,  would happen at the end of the pandemic?
 
 Subscriber churn —  i.e., a rapid bout of subscribers canceling and signing up for Netflix service.  Many subscribers left because they weren’t at home as much anymore. Many signed  up because they finally got jobs and disposable income again.
 
 Whatever the  reason, the end result was a churning, bubbling cauldron of subscribers. Or, as  Wall Street would put it, rising uncertainty. And we all know that Wall Street  hates uncertainty.
 
 This uncertainty escalated  into full-blown panic following Netflix’s fourth-quarter earnings report. All in all, the report wasn’t that bad.  Netflix beat earnings expectations, matched revenue expectations and beat on  subscriber growth. But subscriber guidance? Well, that rolled off a cliff.
 
 Netflix expects to  add just 2.5 million subscribers in the first  quarter of 2022. For comparison, Netflix added 3.98 million subs in the first  quarter of 2021. What’s more, analysts expected 6.93 million new Netflix  subscribers for the same period.
 
 The massive  disconnect prompted NFLX stock to plunge more than 20% the day following the  report. Additionally, the poor subscriber guidance sparked a new and damaging narrative: Has Netflix hit the ceiling on subscribers?
 Back To Life, Back To Reality                  |  |  Great Ones, as a longtime practitioner of investor  sentiment analysis … this is what we call peak or near-peak bearish sentiment. Has  Netflix hit the ceiling on subscribers? Are you kidding me?!
 The same analyst  community that spawned this travesty of a narrative also admitted during  Netflix’s earnings call that there are “800 million to 900 million homes globally  outside of China,” and that  Netflix had only penetrated 25% of those homes.
 
 Does 25% market  penetration sound like hitting the ceiling to you? Of course it doesn’t.
 
 What’s really going  on is that Netflix saw a massive boom in subscribers due to the lockdown. Analysts  then factored this pandemic-induced surge into their existing forecasts for  Netflix’s growth — without taking into account the churn and volatility that would  come once the pandemic ended.
 
 Don’t believe me on  that point? Why else would the consensus expect 6.93 million new subscribers  heading into the end of the pandemic? It’s like they didn’t even think about  people going outside again … or wanting to literally be anywhere else than  locked inside their houses.
 
 Analysts also  didn’t consider that many customers who wanted to subscribe to Netflix already  did so ahead of schedule due to the pandemic. This is called “pull forward” in  corporate speech, and if you’ve paid attention to any of Netflix’s  post-earnings conference calls, you know all about it.
 
 In short, the  pandemic blew up Netflix’s growth plans, allowing the streaming giant to hit  growth targets years before it expected to.
 
 Netflix has  repeatedly warned about this and tempered its forecasts accordingly. But Wall  Street ignored all of those warnings … at least until Netflix’s most recent  quarterly report.
 
 All of which brings us to where we are now, with NFLX stock down 45%  from its all-time highs.
 
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 Mike Carr is a retired Air Force lieutenant colonel who  programmed nuclear codes for the Pentagon during the Cold War. He says with  this simplified trading method, the focus is on the same trade, on the same  ticker symbol, every week.
 
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 Parsing Pershing’s Peculiar Purchase  Great Ones, you know that I don’t recommend following  billionaire investing advice or chasing after hedge fund activity. It’s  typically a losing game. 
 You’re not a  billionaire, so don’t try to invest like one.
 
 But I wanna invest  like Buffett!
 
 Are you Buffett? Do  you have Buffett’s money?
 
 Then it ain’t gonna  happen.
 
 But I might be  ready to eat those words today.
 
 Last week,  billionaire investor Bill Ackman announced that his hedge fund, Pershing  Square, bought roughly $1 billion in NFLX stock:
    I  have long admired [Netflix CEO] Reed Hastings and the remarkable company he and  his team have built. We are delighted that the market has presented us with  this opportunity.  Opportunity? But I  thought the sky was falling for Netflix! Its subscriber growth capped. It’s hit  the ceiling and joining the choir invisible! Or so the financial media would  have you believe. 
 So, why would a  multibillion-dollar hedge fund buy stock in a company with no future?
 
 Trick question. It  wouldn’t, and it didn’t.
 
 NFLX stock is  trading about where it was before the entire pandemic began. And yet, the  company has added some 54 million new subscribers during that period.
 
 That’s a 32% growth  in subscribers, with the stock essentially going nowhere. What’s more, that 32%  growth occurred despite Netflix raising prices.
 
 But that’s not all. At the end of 2019, Netflix reported  fourth-quarter revenue of $5.47 billion. Last week, Netflix reported  fourth-quarter revenue of $7.7 billion. That’s 40% more revenue.
 
 Do you see it yet, Great Ones? NFLX stock is priced  where it was back in late 2019, despite adding 40% more revenue and 32% more  subscribers.
 
 It’s no wonder Ackman is delighted. He  just bought a crap ton of NFLX stock at a massive discount.
   
 Any  Way The Wind Blows…
 Before you go and chase Ackman’s NFLX play, there is one more  thing to consider: You are not a billionaire. Sorry, but it’s true.
 
 (If you are a billionaire and reading Great Stuff, hit me up! We should hang out  sometime.)
 
 What I mean by that is that you might not have the capital or  the time to comfortably ride out the volatility that both NFLX stock and the  market are gonna see for the foreseeable future.
                  |  |  Ackman isn’t a fool. He didn’t make a mistake buying $1 billion in  NFLX shares.
 However, he can afford to lose a few million in the deal as he  patiently waits for Wall Street to come back to its senses and NFLX to trend  steadily higher once again.
 
 You, however, probably do not have that kind of financial leeway.
 
 Sure, NFLX stock will move higher again. But the current  lull may or may not be the bottom for Netflix.
 
 If you have the available capital and the appropriate risk  tolerance to weather potential losses due to broad market volatility, now is a  great time to follow Ackman’s lead and snap up NFLX stock at long-term bargain  prices.
 
 The financial media’s “Netflix hits the ceiling” narrative  is pure fearmongering and baloney. If you can stomach it, NFLX still has plenty  of room to grow and the potential to provide serious returns.
 
 But if you aren’t a risk-taker, or you’re already in  retirement? There are much better options for steady returns and portfolio  growth — Microsoft  comes to mind.
 
 Or, better yet … this “backdoor” electric vehicle play.
 
 According to  Charles Mizrahi, this groundbreaking  technology is going to make gas guzzlers obsolete. But it has nothing to do  with electric vehicle manufacturers, lithium-ion batteries or recharging  stations.
 
 This is the investment opportunity of a lifetime, but I won’t spoil the  surprise.
 
 All you need to know is right here.
 
 Thanks for tuning in for this week’s Great Chat. Have  a great rest of your weekend!
 
 If you have a stock or investing idea you’d like to see  covered in the Great Stuff weekend edition, let us know at: GreatStuffToday@BanyanHill.com.
 
 And if you have that burning yearning that only  more Great Stuff can satisfy, you should check out our deets here:
 Until next time, stay Great!
 Regards,
 
  Joseph Hargett
 Editor, Great Stuff
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