Netflix Stock Drops After Being Given An 'Underperform' Rating By Macquarie Group

Is Netflix Losing To The Media Companies?
This July 20, 2010 file photo shows a Netflix customer turns on Netflix in Palo Alto, Calif. Netflix's Internet video service will debut in four Nordic countries before the end of the year, the latest step in an international expansion that has been crimping the company's financial results and stock price. In an announcement, Wednesday, Aug. 15, 2012, Netflix is coming to Norway, Denmark, Sweden and Finland fills in a blank that had been left open since earlier this year when the company disclosed its plans to enter another European market without providing specifics. The new market includes the setting for one of Netflix's original online video series, Lillyhammer, which revolves around a New York mobster who moves to Norway. (AP Photo/Paul Sakuma)
This July 20, 2010 file photo shows a Netflix customer turns on Netflix in Palo Alto, Calif. Netflix's Internet video service will debut in four Nordic countries before the end of the year, the latest step in an international expansion that has been crimping the company's financial results and stock price. In an announcement, Wednesday, Aug. 15, 2012, Netflix is coming to Norway, Denmark, Sweden and Finland fills in a blank that had been left open since earlier this year when the company disclosed its plans to enter another European market without providing specifics. The new market includes the setting for one of Netflix's original online video series, Lillyhammer, which revolves around a New York mobster who moves to Norway. (AP Photo/Paul Sakuma)

(Reuters) - Netflix Inc shares fell 5.3 percent on Monday after Macquarie started covering the online streaming video company with an "underperform" rating.

Macquarie research analyst Tim Nollen put a $50 price target on the stock because media companies hold the upper hand. "In keeping with our positive thesis on media names like Time Warner and CBS, we believe content owners rule the roost; Netflix is a price taker in an increasingly competitive market," he wrote in the note.

Shares of Netflix fell $3.24 to $57.26.

The once-high flying Netflix stock, which at one point was trading at around $300, has hit several hurdles over the past year mainly over the cost of acquiring movies and TV series from media companies as well as stiff competition.

Content producers such as Time Warner Inc and CBS Corp are being courted by a slew of Netflix competitors like Apple Inc, Google Inc and Amazon, which are trying to lure people to their streaming video services.

For example, Netflix could lose A&E Networks library of TV shows like "Pawn Stars," ""Hoarders," and "Gene Simmons: Family Jewels," unless the companies agree to a new contract that expires on Friday, according to a report in Variety.

In a recent blow, studio partnership Epix formed a three year deal with Amazon. The news sent Netflix shares plummeting. Epix, the pay TV channel with more than 15,000 titles owned by Viacom Inc's Paramount Pictures, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures and Lion's Gate Entertainment Corp struck an exclusive agreement with Netflix in 2010 that ended in September.

Nollen also cited weak subscriber growth, which is "trending below guidance" and the high cost of international expansion as reasons for the rating.

(Reporting By Jennifer Saba; Editing by Kenneth Barry)

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