NEW YORK - Netflix's new double-feature is getting bad reviews on Wall Street.
Financial analysts and money managers are joining the chorus of consumers who are savaging Netflix's decision to separate its streaming video service from its DVD-by-mail division.
Market-watchers say the split could cause more subscribers to drop the service. Netflix will rename its DVD-by-mail operation Qwikster, a brand name that's both hard to pronounce and unknown to consumers. It will also expand into video game rentals. The streaming service will still be called Netflix.
But the 12 million Netflix customers who get both streaming videos and DVDs in Netflix's signature red envelopes will now have to visit two websites to make video requests and check their bills. That outraged subscribers, who filled Netflix's blog with more than 23,000 comments, many of them negative.
Netflix Inc. stock fell $13.72, or 9.5 percent, to close at $130.03 Tuesday. It is now down 55 percent since July 12, when the company announced that it was effectively raising prices by as much as 60 percent for customers who want to receive DVDs in the mail and watch videos online. The Standard & Poor's 500 index has fallen 8 percent in the same period.
With a nod to the terse movie-critic blurbs we all know and love, here's a collection of quotes from financial experts who are watching the stock:
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"Netflix's recent price changes, followed by the separation and rebranding of the DVD business, have increased (subscriber turnover) and damaged the brand value..."