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K-Drama Stocks Fall as Netflix to Curb Spending on Films, Shows

(Bloomberg) -- K-drama stocks, or shares of Korean drama production studios, slide on Wednesday as Netflix Inc. said it will curb its spending on films and TV shows after reporting its first subscriber loss in more than a decade. Most Read from BloombergNetflix Tumbles as 200,000 Users Exit for First Drop in DecadeIn Defense of Elon Musk's Managerial ExcellenceTwitter Has a Poison Pill NowU.S. Stops Mask Requirement on Planes After Judge’s RulingPutin Calls Time on Foreign Listings in Fresh Hit Read More...

(Bloomberg) — K-drama stocks, or shares of Korean drama production studios, slide on Wednesday as Netflix Inc. said it will curb its spending on films and TV shows after reporting its first subscriber loss in more than a decade.

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An equal-weighted basket of local drama producers’ shares dropped about 2% on Wednesday, underperforming the Kosdaq Index that includes about a dozen of the stocks. Netflix stock plunged 26% in extended trading after the company forecast a drop of 2 million customers this quarter, also sending other streaming stocks lower.

Analysts, however, said the stock price retreat would be short-lived as Netflix is unlikely to cut its content investment in Asia, the only region in which the streaming giant saw subscriber growth in the first quarter. Netflix added more than 1 million customers in Asia, helped by popular new titles such as the South Korean drama “All of Us Are Dead.”

Read: ‘Squid Game’ Helps Make Asia Lone Bright Spot for Netflix

Among the biggest losers in South Korea on Wednesday were major production firms including Studio Dragon Corp. and Jcontentree Corp., with each falling as much as 6.3% and 5.2% respectively before paring losses. Studio Dragon is behind Netflix streamed “Crash Landing on You” and “Sweet Home,” while Jcontentree created Netflix original “D.P.”

The basket of K-drama stocks has climbed nearly 9% since the release of Squid Game in mid-September, with the series boosting the popularity of Korean content worldwide and prompting global players including Walt Disney Co., Apple Inc. and Warner Media to invest in local-language titles and original series to lure subscribers.

The Korean survival drama, depicting heavily indebted people playing deadly childhood games for a huge monetary prize, became the most popular series on Netflix. Netflix announced its biggest ever lineup of Korean shows in January — with more than 25 programs — after a six-fold global rise in viewing hours for the nation’s shows in 2021.

Analysts said Netflix’s spending cuts will most likely be in the U.S. and other regions outside Asia, while global players will continue to boost their spending in Korea.

“It’s not bad for Korean companies,” Lee Kihoon, an analyst at Hana Financial Investment Co., said after Netflix earnings results. “Netflix will increase spending in South Korea because Asia is the only place where it is seeing growth.”

Read: ‘Squid Game’ Trade Alive in Korean Stocks Even as Netflix Slumps

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