But other services backed by deep-pocketed rivals such as Walt Disney Co. and Apple have been making inroads in recent years and a bevy of other networks also are wading into video streaming in an attempt to grab eyeballs and a piece of household budgets. The escalating competition is one reason Netflix decided to expand into video games last year.
While acknowledging the competition is having a "marginal" effects on its growth in i its quarterly shareholder letter, Netflix emphasised its service is still thriving in every country where it's available.
The company also is faring well financially, even as its subscriber growth tapers off. Netflix earned US$607 million ($898.4m), or US$1.33 per share, in the fourth quarter, a 12 per cent increase from the same time in the prior year. Fourth-quarter revenue rose by 16 per cent to US$7.7 billion.
Investors, though, are getting more worried that Netflix may be nearing its peak in popularity. Those concerns have caused Netflix's stock price to plummet by more than 30 per cent from its peak of roughly US$700 reached in mid-November.
The opportunities for future growth have become particularly tough in Netflix's biggest market -- the US and Canada -- where it's starting to appear that most households interested in subscribing to the service already have an account. Netflix ended 2021 with 75.2 million subscribers in the US and Canada, translating into a paltry one-year gain of 1.3 million subscribers in that region.
Last week, Netflix raised its price by roughly 10 per cent within the US and Canada -- a move that could cause some subscribers to cancel the service, based on the company's past history with previous price hikes.
On the upside, Netflix on Friday will unveil the fourth season of "Ozark," one of its most popular series and a potential magnet for new subscribers.
- AP