Why Netflix Isn’t in WisdomTree’s Growth Leaders Fund – and Hasn’t Ever Been

schwartzfinal
Global Chief Investment Officer
Follow Jeremy Schwartz
CEO of Applico
04/30/2021

FAANG is now FAMGA (Facebook, Apple, Microsoft, Google, Amazon). This is the message Applico has been communicating for the past couple years, dating back to Alex’s Fox Business interview in 2019. And since Netflix’s annual report was released this month, Netflix’s high-growth tech story has been debunked. Instead, Netflix is just a movie studio with better digital pipes than its competitors. And, unfortunately for Netflix, those pipes can be replicated.

Why is it that Netflix has fallen out of grace so quickly with investors? Because it’s not a platform business. And that’s precisely why it’s not in the WisdomTree Growth Leaders Fund (PLAT), which seeks to track the price and yield performance, before fees and expenses, of the WisdomTree Growth Leaders Index (WTMDPL).

 

A platform business connects two user groups together: consumers and producers (in this case, content creators). Let’s compare YouTube versus Netflix as a comparison of platform versus linear. YouTube has millions of content creators who willingly contribute videos onto the YouTube platform—for free! YouTube doesn’t have to pay licensing fees or make upfront payments for content. Said another way, almost all of YouTube’s content sits off the balance sheet. It’s contributed onto the platform by content creators—producers—who hope to gain audience and/or revenue share from advertising.

Netflix, on the other hand, has more than $26 billion of “non-current content assets” on its balance sheet as of April 22, 2021. And its profitability is entirely dependent on how quickly, or slowly, it depreciates those content assets. Not to mention, after achieving positive free cash flow (FCF) in 2020, the company has signaled a return to negative free cash flow as movie production ramps up again. 

 

Outside of the financials, let’s take a step back and look more broadly at the competitive landscape and what really matters for investors: growth.

Netflix’s Competitive Landscape

Netflix enjoyed rapid growth for many years while it was the only game in town, growing at 30% CAGR for the last five years. However, in 18 months’ time, that story has rapidly changed. How is it possible for such a dominant, heralded company like Netflix to fall from grace so quickly?

Platform businesses enjoy such high valuations and margins because they can remain the only game in town. Platform markets have a winner-take-all dynamic because they aggregate both demand and supply. When supply is fragmented, platforms thrive. YouTube has a network of millions of content creators. It’s nearly impossible to convince a material portion of those content creators to use another network and drop YouTube because of how network effects work. As demand grows, so does supply, and vice versa—this is further explained in Metcalfe’s Law and Moazed’s book, Modern Monopolies.

Many have tried to dethrone YouTube, like IAC’s Vimeo. Barry Diller, billionaire and savvy platform expert, also owns dominant platforms in travel and home services with Expedia, Angie HomeAdvisor, Match and Tinder. Mr. Diller intimately understands platform dynamics. For that reason, he recognized that Vimeo’s business model needed to pivot from trying to compete directly with YouTube. Instead, Vimeo has become a linear SaaS provider of tools to content creators—and is doing quite well with its new positioning.

 

Platform markets only afford one to two winners at maturity. Netflix is not a platform and doesn’t have supply-side barriers to entry. That’s why more than five material competitors have not only launched in the past 18 months, but have made serious subscriber gains in that same period of time. Just 18 months! Disney+ already has more than 90 million subscribers. Behind Disney+, HBO Max launched in May 2020 and has more than 40 million subscribers. Peacock has more than 30 million subscribers from Comcast. And don’t forget about the material subscriber gains for Apple TV+, Amazon Prime Video and Paramount+ from Viacom/CBS.

 

In the absence of competition exists unabated growth. Consistent, high growth is what investors reward in today’s environment. Platform markets at maturity provide winner-take-all dynamics and therefore an absence of competition—hence, these businesses are modern monopolies. Unfortunately for Netflix, its leadership never made it a priority to evolve its business model and embrace platform dynamics as we’ve seen Spotify do in recent years. 

Spotify has similar dynamics, where its supply of musicians is consolidated and not fragmented. While Spotify has huge demand, it doesn't have supply-side barriers to entry. That is, until it embraced podcasting. Podcasting is highly fragmented, and we’ve seen Spotify invest aggressively with Joe Rogan and other key podcasting influencers. I think this is a great strategy and a sign of great leadership to continuously evolve the business model—unlike Netflix, whose stagnant business model has the look of a one-hit wonder. Perhaps it’s a good time for Reed Hastings to transition to greener pastures.

Please visit PLAT’s Fund detail page for its current holdings.

Important Risks Related to this Article

There are risks associated with investing, including possible loss of principal. Foreign investing involves special risks, such as risk of loss from currency fluctuation or political or economic uncertainty; these risks may be enhanced in emerging, offshore or frontier markets. Technology platform companies have significant exposure to consumers and businesses, and a failure to attract and retain a substantial number of such users to a company’s products, services, content or technology could adversely affect operating results. Technological changes could require substantial expenditures by a technology platform company to modify or adapt its products, services, content or infrastructure. Technology platform companies typically face intense competition, and the development of new products is a complex and uncertain process. Concerns regarding a company’s products or services that may compromise the privacy of users, or other cybersecurity concerns, even if unfounded, could damage a company’s reputation and adversely affect operating results. Many technology platform companies currently operate under less regulatory scrutiny, but there is significant risk that costs associated with regulatory oversight could increase in the future. The Fund invests in the securities included in, or representative of, its Index regardless of their investment merit, and the Fund does not attempt to outperform its Index or take defensive positions in declining markets. The composition of the Index is heavily dependent on quantitative and qualitative information and data from one or more third parties, and the Index may not perform as intended. Please read the Fund’s prospectus for specific details regarding the Fund’s risk profile.

WisdomTree licenses data from Applico, a platform consulting business, to identify platform-based businesses. 

 

Related Blogs

Discussions Around Platform Businesses and Earnings Trends

Our New Growth Leaders Strategy—Reintroducing the Platform Business Model

Related Funds

WisdomTree Cybersecurity Fund

WisdomTree Cloud Computing Fund

Tags

About the Contributors
schwartzfinal
Global Chief Investment Officer
Follow Jeremy Schwartz

Jeremy Schwartz has served as our Global Chief Investment Officer since November 2021 and leads WisdomTree’s investment strategy team in the construction of WisdomTree’s equity Indexes, quantitative active strategies and multi-asset Model Portfolios. Jeremy joined WisdomTree in May 2005 as a Senior Analyst, adding Deputy Director of Research to his responsibilities in February 2007. He served as Director of Research from October 2008 to October 2018 and as Global Head of Research from November 2018 to November 2021. Before joining WisdomTree, he was a head research assistant for Professor Jeremy Siegel and, in 2022, became his co-author on the sixth edition of the book Stocks for the Long Run. Jeremy is also co-author of the Financial Analysts Journal paper “What Happened to the Original Stocks in the S&P 500?” He received his B.S. in economics from The Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania and hosts the Wharton Business Radio program Behind the Markets on SiriusXM 132. Jeremy is a member of the CFA Society of Philadelphia.

CEO of Applico