NFLX
NFLX
NFLX
Fellow shareholders,
● In Q3, revenue grew 15% year over year and operating margin was 30% vs. 22% last year. For
2024, we expect revenue growth of 15% (the high end of our 14% to 15% range), and operating
margin of 27% (vs 26% previously).
● We’ve delivered a string of hits this quarter, including new series like The Perfect Couple, Nobody
Wants This and Tokyo Swindlers, returning favorites like Emily in Paris and Cobra Kai and big films
like Beverly Hills Cop: Axel F, Rebel Ridge and Officer Black Belt.
● Engagement, our best proxy for member happiness, remains healthy. Through the first three
quarters of 2024, view hours per member amongst owner households (the clearest view of
engagement trends post the introduction of paid sharing) increased year over year.
● We continue to build our advertising business and improve our offering for advertisers. Ads
membership was up 35% quarter on quarter, and our ad tech platform is on track to launch in
Canada in Q4 and more broadly in 2025.
● We’ve delivered on our plan to reaccelerate our business, and we’re excited to finish the year
strong with a great Q4 slate, including Squid Game S2, the Jake Paul/Mike Tyson fight and two
NFL games on Christmas Day. As we look ahead to 2025, we’re focused on improving every
aspect of our service and continuing to deliver healthy revenue and profit growth.
Q4'24
(in millions except per share data) Q3'23 Q4'23 Q1'24 Q2'24 Q3'24
Forecast
Revenue $8,542 $8,833 $9,370 $9,559 $9,825 $10,128
Y/Y % Growth 7.8% 12.5% 14.8% 16.8% 15.0% 14.7%
Operating Income $1,916 $1,496 $2,633 $2,603 $2,909 $2,190
Operating Margin 22.4% 16.9% 28.1% 27.2% 29.6% 21.6%
Net Income $1,677 $938 $2,332 $2,147 $2,364 $1,847
Diluted EPS $3.73 $2.11 $5.28 $4.88 $5.40 $4.23
Net cash provided by operating activities $1,992 $1,663 $2,213 $1,291 $2,321
Free Cash Flow $1,888 $1,581 $2,137 $1,213 $2,194
Shares (FD) 450.0 444.3 441.7 439.7 437.9
1
Q3 Results
Revenue in Q3 grew 15% (21% on a foreign exchange (F/X) neutral basis1), 1% higher than our beginning
of quarter forecast. Average paid memberships increased 15% year over year as paid net additions in Q3
were 5.1M vs. 8.8M in Q3’23. ARM2 was flat year over year and up 5% on a F/X neutral basis3. Regional
highlights include:
● UCAN, our most mature market, saw a 16% year over year increase in revenue, driven by 10%
and 5% growth in average paid memberships and ARM, respectively.
● Revenue in EMEA grew 16% year over year, consistent with the increase in average paid
memberships.
● We’re improving our product/market fit in APAC and had a strong local content slate in Japan,
Korea, Thailand and India in Q3. As a result, our revenue growth rate in APAC (+19% year over
year) led all regions.
● LATAM revenue rose 9% year over year. Paid net adds of -0.1M was due to recent price changes
and a softer content slate. However, membership growth has rebounded nicely early in Q4’24.
Q3’24 operating income increased 52% year over year to $2.9B, while operating margin of 30% improved
seven percentage points vs. the year ago quarter. This was above our guidance forecast due to slightly
higher revenue and the timing of spending.
EPS amounted to $5.40 vs. $3.73 (+45% year over year) and included a $91M loss from F/X ,
predominantly related to our Euro denominated debt remeasurement (net of hedging impacts), which is
recognized below operating income in “interest and other income”.
Forecast
As a reminder, the quarterly guidance we provide is our actual internal forecast at the time we report
and we strive for accuracy, not conservatism. Our primary financial metrics are revenue for growth and
operating margin for profitability. Our goals are to sustain healthy revenue growth, expand our operating
margin and grow free cash flow.
For Q4’24, we forecast 15% revenue growth, or 17% on a F/X neutral basis. We expect paid net additions
to be higher in Q4 than in Q3’24 due to normal seasonality and a strong content slate. We project Q4
operating margin of 22%, a five percentage point year-over-year improvement.
Our fourth quarter guidance implies that revenue will grow 15% year over year for the full year 2024, at
the high end of our prior 14%-15% revenue growth expectation. Given the slightly higher revenue
forecast, we’re now forecasting 2024 operating margin of 27% based on F/X rates as of 1/1/24 and on a
1
Excluding the year over year effect of foreign exchange rate movements and the impact of hedging gains/losses realized as
revenues. Assumes foreign exchange rates remained constant with foreign exchange rates from each of the corresponding
months of the prior-year period.
2
ARM (Average Revenue per Membership) is defined as streaming revenue divided by the average number of streaming paid
memberships divided by the number of months in the period. These figures do not include sales taxes or VAT.
3
Similar to recent quarters, the primary difference between F/X neutral and reported growth for both revenue and ARM was
large peso price increases in Argentina due to local inflation and the devaluation of the Argentine peso relative to the US dollar.
2
reported basis, up from 26% previously. This would represent a six percentage point increase compared
with the full year 2023.
We’re pleased that we’ve reaccelerated our growth and, as we head into 2025, we expect to deliver solid
revenue and profit growth by both improving our core series and film offering while investing in new
growth initiatives like ads and gaming. For 2025, based on F/X rates as of 9/30/24, we forecast revenue
of $43B-$44B, which would represent growth of 11%-13% off of our 2024 revenue guidance of $38.9B.
We expect revenue growth to be driven by a healthy increase in paid memberships and ARM. We’re
targeting a 2025 operating margin of 28% (also based on F/X rates as of 9/30) vs. our forecast for 27% in
2024; after delivering outsized margin improvement in 2024, we want to balance near term margin
growth with investing appropriately in our business. We still see plenty of room to increase our margins
over the long term.
A strong measure of whether members loved a title is watch time. How many people liked a movie or TV
show enough to press play and stay? It’s why we share Weekly Top 10 lists and twice a year engagement
reports, both of which are based on views (i.e. the total hours watched divided by the run time) and
demonstrate that success on Netflix comes in all shapes and sizes. We have mega hits with enormous
audiences, and hugely successful shows or movies with smaller ones. Critical acclaim is another measure
of success that’s especially important for our creators. At this year’s Primetime Emmys, our talent
received 107 nominations and 24 wins across multiple genres — from Ripley and The Crown to Beckham,
Blue Eye Samurai and Love on the Spectrum. Baby Reindeer took home six awards, including Outstanding
Limited Series, best actor and writing for creator Richard Gadd and best supporting actress for Jessica
Gunning. All in, Netflix nominated titles generated more Nielsen Top 10 view hours, and appeared on
these lists more frequently, than all other streamers combined.
Engagement on Netflix is healthy: around two hours a day per paid membership on average, despite the
impact of paid sharing. As we’ve discussed before, paid sharing led to lower viewing on accounts that
were shared as fewer people were watching on them. In addition, when sharers bought their own
subscriptions, much of that viewing was already reflected in hours viewed (impacting the trend in view
hours per membership). When you isolate owner households (which excludes the impact of paid
sharing), view hours for those owner households rose year over year in the first three quarters of 2024.
Programming for such a large, engaged audience, with so much variety and great quality, is hard. It’s why
streaming services which lack our breadth of content are increasingly looking to bundle their offerings
(selling and discounting their services together, channel offerings, etc.). Netflix is already an
extraordinary package of series and films (licensed and original), and increasingly games and live events
— all in one place and for one price, easy to use and great value for money. At just under 10% of TV time
3
today in our biggest countries, we believe there’s a huge opportunity to grow that share by investing
even more in our slate and continuing to improve the variety and quality of our offering. Part of that
improvement is ensuring we have a steady drumbeat of great, new TV shows, movies and games
throughout the year to satisfy our members.
Our 2024 programming has been patchier than normal due to last year’s strikes. But our volume has
picked up again and we’re excited for what’s ahead. We’ve seen break-out hit shows with The Perfect
Couple*, starring Nicole Kidman and Liev Schreiber (65.2M views4), Monsters: The Lyle and Erik
Menendez Story* by Ryan Murphy (54.6M views) — coupled with The Menendez Brothers* documentary
in October (24.2M views) — Nobody Wants This* with Kristen Bell and Adam Brody (37.0M views),
Simone Biles: Rising* (19.0M views), The Accident* from Mexico (37.2M views), Desperate Lies from
Brazil (19.5M views), Breathless* from Spain (17.3M views), Tokyo Swindlers* from Japan (10.5M views)
and Culinary Class Wars* from Korea (11.0M views).
We had beloved returning seasons too: Emily in Paris season 4* (51.0M views), Selling Sunset season 8*
(10.9M views), Too Hot to Handle season 6* (10.2M views) and Cobra Kai season 6* (36.5M views). And
as fan favorites like Umbrella Academy* (25.5M views for its final fourth season; 326M across all seasons
5
) and Elite* (12.2M views for its final eighth season; 494M across all seasons) come to an end, we’re
excited by the promise of our newer titles — with subsequent seasons recently announced for Nobody
Wants This, The Diplomat, The Night Agent, Supacell, The Gentlemen, Culinary Class Wars and Desperate
Lies.
On the film side, we’re generating very large audiences — making our movies some of the most watched
of any studio in the world. These include The Union* (111.9M views), Rebel Ridge* (104.7M views),
Beverly Hills Cop: Axel F (87.5M views), Vanished into the Night (Italy, 39.2M views), Officer Black Belt*
(South Korea, 32.8M views), Maharaja (India, 22.6M views) and Blame the Game (Germany, 22.4M
views).
In Q4, members will be able to choose from hit returning series Squid Game S2, Outer Banks S4, and
Love is Blind S7 as well as new dramas like Black Doves from the UK (starring Keira Knightley) and
comedies like No Good Deed (starring Lisa Kudrow and Ray Romano) and Man on The Inside with Ted
Danson. In Latin America, we have two of the biggest, most ambitious shows ever made in the region
premiering this winter: 100 Years of Solitude based on the iconic novel by Gabriel García Márquez from
Colombia; and Senna, a biopic about one of the greatest Formula 1 drivers of all time from Brazil. Our
unscripted offerings include Aaron Rodgers: Enigma, which chronicles the life and career of the NFL
legend, and the second season of our music competition series Rhythm + Flow. Our film slate includes
Carry-On, an action thriller starring Taron Egerton and Jason Bateman, The Six Triple Eight, a Tyler
Perry-directed war drama starring Kerry Washington, and Spellbound produced by John Lasseter.
4
A view is defined as hours viewed divided by runtime for each title. Views for a title are based on the first 91 days since the
release of each episode (less than 91 days denoted with an asterisk and data is from launch date through October 14, 2024). We
publish our top titles based on views each week at Netflix Top 10.
5
Views across all seasons are calculated based on launch date for each season through October 14, 2024.
4
We’ve also expanded our offering to include big live events, including the Mike Tyson and Jake Paul
boxing match on November 15 — and two Christmas Day NFL games, with the Kansas City Chiefs facing
the Pittsburgh Steelers, and the Baltimore Ravens facing the Houston Texans.
Monetization
As we seek to grow engagement and deliver more value to our members, we’re also working to improve
our monetization by refining our plans and pricing. Key is ensuring that we have a range of prices and
plans to meet a variety of needs. Earlier this month, we increased prices in a few countries in EMEA plus
Japan and starting tomorrow we'll increase prices in Spain and Italy. We phased out the Basic plan in the
US and France this past quarter and we’ll do the same in Brazil later in Q4.
We’re now approaching the second anniversary of the launch of our advertising business and we’re
making good progress. Our ads plan allows us to offer a lower price point for consumers, which is
proving to be popular: in Q3, it accounted for over 50% of sign-ups in our ads countries and membership
on our ads plan grew 35% quarter over quarter. We’re on track to reach what we believe to be critical ad
subscriber scale for advertisers in all of our ads countries in 2025, creating a strong base from which we
can further increase our ad membership in 2026 and beyond. We’re also pleased with the engagement
on our ads plan with view hours per membership similar to engagement on our standard plan in our 12
ads countries.
However, we have much more work to do improving our offering for advertisers, which will be a priority
over the next few years. Our in-house first party ad tech platform is on track to roll out in Canada next
month, with a broader launch to all ads countries in 2025. We’ve also expanded our programmatic
capabilities with The Trade Desk and Google DV 360, which is going well.
It’s still very early for our advertising initiative. As we said last quarter, it takes time to build a new
revenue stream and we don’t expect ads to be a primary driver of our revenue growth in 2025. The near
term challenge (and medium term opportunity) is that we’re scaling faster than our ability to monetize
our growing ad inventory. While this creates a short term drag on ARM, we are balancing building ads
scale (for more meaningful ads revenue and ARM contribution over time) while still delivering healthy
overall revenue growth in the near term (as noted, we expect our total company revenue to grow 15%
year over year in 2024). And we’re making progress with ads monetization, as we saw in this year’s US
Upfront - closing deals with all major holding companies as well as independent agencies, with a 150%
plus increase in upfront ad sales commitments over 2023, in-line with our expectations.
6
Defined as cash provided by (used in) operating activities less purchases of property and equipment and change in other
assets.
5
during Q3. As a result, our total debt increased to $16B from $14B in Q2, but net debt7 decreased from
$7.4B in Q2 to $6.8B at the end of Q3. Proceeds from our bond offering will be used to pay down $1.8B
in bonds that mature over the next 12 months.
Reference
For quick reference, our past investor letters can be found here.
7
Defined as total debt less cash and cash equivalents and short-term investments. Total debt consists of short-term and
long-term debt, plus debt issuance costs and original issuance discount.
6
Regional Breakdown
(in millions) Q3'23 Q4'23 Q1'24 Q2'24 Q3'24
UCAN Streaming:
Revenue $3,735 $3,931 $4,224 $4,296 $4,322
Paid Memberships 77.32 80.13 82.66 84.11 84.80
Paid Net Additions 1.75 2.81 2.53 1.45 0.69
Average Revenue per Membership $16.29 $16.64 $17.30 $17.17 $17.06
Y/Y % Growth 0% 3% 7% 7% 5%
F/X Neutral Y/Y % Growth 0% 3% 7% 7% 5%
EMEA:
Revenue $2,693 $2,784 $2,958 $3,008 $3,133
Paid Memberships 83.76 88.81 91.73 93.96 96.13
Paid Net Additions 3.95 5.05 2.92 2.24 2.17
Average Revenue per Membership $10.98 $10.75 $10.92 $10.80 $10.99
Y/Y % Growth 2% 3% 0% -1% 0%
F/X Neutral Y/Y % Growth -2% -1% 0% 1% 1%
LATAM:
Revenue $1,143 $1,156 $1,165 $1,204 $1,241
Paid Memberships 43.65 46.00 47.72 49.25 49.18
Paid Net Additions 1.18 2.35 1.72 1.53 (0.07)
Average Revenue per Membership $8.85 $8.60 $8.29 $8.28 $8.40
Y/Y % Growth 3% 4% -4% -3% -5%
F/X Neutral Y/Y % Growth 8% 16% 16% 24% 27%
APAC:
Revenue $948 $963 $1,023 $1,052 $1,128
Paid Memberships 42.43 45.34 47.50 50.32 52.60
Paid Net Additions 1.88 2.91 2.16 2.83 2.28
Average Revenue per Membership $7.62 $7.31 $7.35 $7.17 $7.31
Y/Y % Growth -9% -5% -8% -6% -4%
F/X Neutral Y/Y % Growth -6% -4% -4% -3% -2%
F/X Neutral ARM growth excludes the year over year effect of foreign exchange rate movements and the impact of hedging
gains/losses realized as revenues. Assumes foreign exchange rates remained constant with foreign exchange rates from each of
the corresponding months of the prior-year period.
7
F/X Neutral Operating Margin Disclosure
To provide additional transparency around our operating margin, we disclose each quarter our
year-to-date (YTD) operating margin based on F/X rates at the beginning of each year. This will allow
investors to see how our operating margin is tracking against our target (which was set in January of
2024 based on F/X rates at that time), absent intra-year fluctuations in F/X.
$'s in Millions Full Year 2021 Full Year 2022 Full Year 2023 YTD 2024
As Reported
Revenue $29,698 $31,616 $33,723 $28,754
Operating Expenses $23,503 $25,983 $26,769 $20,610
Operating Profit $6,195 $5,633 $6,954 $8,145
Operating Margin 20.9% 17.8% 20.6% 28.3%
FX Impact
Revenue $(404) $(962) $(124) $(325)
Operating Expenses $(82) $(214) $2 $(73)
Operating Profit $(322) $(748) $(126) $(252)
Adjusted*
Revenue $30,102 $32,578 $33,847 $29,079
Operating Expenses $23,585 $26,196 $26,768 $20,683
Operating Profit $6,517 $6,381 $7,080 $8,396
Restructuring Charges $150
IR Contact: PR Contact:
Lowell Singer Emily Feingold
VP, Investor Relations VP, Corporate Communications
818 434-2141 323 287-0756
8
Use of Non-GAAP Measures
This shareholder letter and its attachments include reference to the non-GAAP financial measures of F/X
neutral revenue and adjusted operating profit and margin, free cash flow and net debt. Management
believes that free cash flow is an important liquidity metric because it measures, during a given period,
the amount of cash generated that is available to repay debt obligations, make strategic acquisitions and
investments and for certain other activities like stock repurchases. Management believes that F/X neutral
revenue and adjusted operating profit and margin allow investors to compare our projected results to
our actual results absent year-over-year and intra-year currency fluctuations, respectively, and the
impact of restructuring costs. Management believes net debt is a useful measure of the company's
liquidity, capital structure, and leverage. However, these non-GAAP financial measures should be
considered in addition to, not as a substitute for or superior to, net income, operating income (profit),
operating margin, diluted earnings per share and net cash provided by (used in) operating activities, or
other financial measures prepared in accordance with GAAP. Reconciliation to the GAAP equivalent of
these non-GAAP measures are contained in tabular form on the attached unaudited financial statements
and in the F/X neutral operating margin disclosure above. We are not able to reconcile forward-looking
non-GAAP financial measures because we are unable to predict without unreasonable effort the exact
amount or timing of the reconciling items, including property and equipment and change in other assets,
and the impact of changes in currency exchange rates. The variability of these items could have a
significant impact on our future GAAP financial results.
Forward-Looking Statements
This shareholder letter contains certain forward-looking statements within the meaning of the federal
securities laws, including statements regarding our expected results for the fiscal quarter and fiscal year
ending December 31, 2024; adoption and growth of streaming entertainment; growth strategy and
outlook; market opportunity; competitive landscape and position; entertainment offerings, including TV
shows, movies, games, and live programming; engagement; slate strength; pricing and plans strategy;
ad-supported tier and its prospects; advertising business, including the launch of our ad-tech platform;
product strategy; partnerships; impact of foreign exchange rates; foreign currency exchange hedging
program; stock repurchases; debt refinancings and expected use of proceeds; paid net additions;
revenue and revenue growth; ARM, operating income, operating margin, net income, earnings per share,
and free cash flow. The forward-looking statements in this letter are subject to risks and uncertainties
that could cause actual results and events to differ, including, without limitation: our ability to attract
new members and engage and retain existing members; our ability to compete effectively, including for
consumer engagement with different modes of entertainment; failing to improve the variety and quality
of entertainment offerings; adoption of the ads plan and paid sharing; maintenance and expansion of
device platforms for streaming; fluctuations in consumer usage of our service; service disruptions;
production risks; macroeconomic conditions; content slate and timing of content releases. A detailed
discussion of these and other risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results and events to differ
materially from such forward-looking statements is included in our filings with the Securities and
Exchange Commission, including our Annual Report on Form 10-K, filed with the Securities and Exchange
Commission (“SEC”) on January 26, 2024. The Company provides internal forecast numbers. Investors
should anticipate that actual performance will vary from these forecast numbers based on risks and
uncertainties discussed above and in our Annual Report on Form 10-K. We undertake no obligation to
9
update forward-looking statements to reflect events or circumstances occurring after the date of this
shareholder letter.
10
Netflix, Inc.
Consolidated Statements of Operations
(unaudited)
(in thousands, except per share data)
11
Netflix, Inc.
Consolidated Balance Sheets
(in thousands)
As of
September 30, December 31,
2024 2023
(unaudited)
Assets
Current assets:
Cash and cash equivalents $ 7,457,025 $ 7,116,913
Short-term investments 1,766,902 20,973
Other current assets 2,905,172 2,780,247
Total current assets 12,129,099 9,918,133
Content assets, net 32,175,382 31,658,056
Property and equipment, net 1,568,212 1,491,444
Other non-current assets 6,409,151 5,664,359
Total assets $ 52,281,844 $ 48,731,992
Liabilities and Stockholders' Equity
Current liabilities:
Current content liabilities $ 4,489,971 $ 4,466,470
Accounts payable 641,953 747,412
Accrued expenses and other liabilities 2,241,758 1,803,960
Deferred revenue 1,513,048 1,442,969
Short-term debt 1,820,396 399,844
Total current liabilities 10,707,126 8,860,655
Non-current content liabilities 1,918,089 2,578,173
Long-term debt 14,160,932 14,143,417
Other non-current liabilities 2,774,961 2,561,434
Total liabilities 29,561,108 28,143,679
Stockholders' equity:
Common stock 5,887,903 5,145,172
Treasury stock at cost (12,254,855) (6,922,200)
Accumulated other comprehensive loss (344,622) (223,945)
Retained earnings 29,432,310 22,589,286
Total stockholders' equity 22,720,736 20,588,313
Total liabilities and stockholders' equity $ 52,281,844 $ 48,731,992
Supplemental Information
Total streaming content obligations* $ 22,698,295 $ 21,713,349
* Total streaming content obligations are comprised of content liabilities included in "Current content liabilities" and "Non-current content
liabilities" on the Consolidated Balance Sheets and obligations that are not reflected on the Consolidated Balance Sheets as they did not yet meet
the criteria for recognition.
12
Netflix, Inc.
Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows
(unaudited)
(in thousands)
Three Months Ended Nine Months Ended
September 30, June 30, September 30, September 30, September 30,
2024 2024 2023 2024 2023
Cash flows from operating activities:
Net income $ 2,363,509 $ 2,147,306 $ 1,677,422 $ 6,843,024 $ 4,470,152
Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash provided by
operating activities:
Additions to content assets (4,016,396) (4,048,852) (2,883,839) (11,794,215) (9,025,512)
Change in content liabilities (83,585) (366,572) (325,989) (639,598) (634,661)
Amortization of content assets 3,699,521 3,769,690 3,573,353 11,140,016 10,443,358
Depreciation and amortization of property, equipment and
intangibles 80,914 81,227 90,660 249,375 270,380
Stock-based compensation expense 65,650 68,766 79,720 210,761 256,849
Foreign currency remeasurement loss (gain) on debt 104,809 (42,692) (172,678) (68,684) (63,075)
Other non-cash items 128,082 138,588 115,688 363,851 357,179
Deferred income taxes (200,982) (209,387) (86,277) (517,446) (288,231)
Changes in operating assets and liabilities:
Other current assets 54,956 (28,959) 103,766 64,046 (167,805)
Accounts payable 30,597 (19,358) (68,390) (134,026) (119,726)
Accrued expenses and other liabilities 179,011 (114,303) (65,029) 316,490 298,101
Deferred revenue 39,328 4,236 (5,733) 70,079 41,524
Other non-current assets and liabilities (124,313) (88,843) (40,359) (279,203) (227,246)
Net cash provided by operating activities 2,321,101 1,290,847 1,992,315 5,824,470 5,611,287
Cash flows from investing activities:
Purchases of property and equipment (126,863) (78,287) (103,929) (280,864) (266,920)
Purchases of investments (1,742,246) — — (1,742,246) (504,862)
Proceeds from maturities of investments — — 400,000 — 901,937
Net cash provided by (used in) investing activities (1,869,109) (78,287) 296,071 (2,023,110) 130,155
Cash flows from financing activities:
Proceeds from issuance of debt 1,794,460 — — 1,794,460 —
Repayments of debt — — — (400,000) —
Proceeds from issuance of common stock 143,244 118,750 57,818 530,875 118,563
Repurchases of common stock (1,700,000) (1,599,998) (2,500,100) (5,299,998) (3,545,347)
Taxes paid related to net share settlement of equity awards (2,024) (1,883) — (5,732) —
Other financing activities (9,084) (6,250) (32,826) (15,334) (71,746)
Net cash provided by (used in) financing activities 226,596 (1,489,381) (2,475,108) (3,395,729) (3,498,530)
Effect of exchange rate changes on cash, cash equivalents, and
restricted cash 153,452 (122,723) (122,707) (65,061) (56,658)
Net increase (decrease) in cash, cash equivalents, and restricted
cash 832,040 (399,544) (309,429) 340,570 2,186,254
Cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash at beginning of period 6,627,045 7,026,589 7,666,265 7,118,515 5,170,582
Cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash at end of period $ 7,459,085 $ 6,627,045 $ 7,356,836 $ 7,459,085 $ 7,356,836
13
Three Months Ended Nine Months Ended
September 30, June 30, September 30, September 30, September 30,
2024 2024 2023 2024 2023
Non-GAAP free cash flow reconciliation:
Net cash provided by operating activities $ 2,321,101 $ 1,290,847 $ 1,992,315 $ 5,824,470 $ 5,611,287
Purchases of property and equipment (126,863) (78,287) (103,929) (280,864) (266,920)
Non-GAAP free cash flow $ 2,194,238 $ 1,212,560 $ 1,888,386 $ 5,543,606 $ 5,344,367
14
Netflix, Inc.
Non-GAAP Information
(unaudited)
(in thousands, except percentages)
As of
September 30, June 30,
2024 2024
Non-GAAP Net Debt reconciliation:
Total debt $ 15,981,328 $ 13,980,065
Add: Debt issuance costs and original issue discount 73,969 58,039
Less: Cash and cash equivalents (7,457,025) (6,624,939)
Less: Short-term investments (1,766,902) (30,973)
Net debt $ 6,831,370 $ 7,382,192
15