NEW YORK, Oct 17 — Wall Street cheered a rebound in Netflix subscribers in the third quarter, driving shares in the firm 9 per cent higher today even as analysts warned conservative estimates for the next three months may be a hint of less certain times ahead.

The video-streaming pioneer is bracing for the launch next month of Walt Disney Co’s Disney+ and Apple Inc’s Apple TV+ after years when it has been left largely to develop and garner content from Hollywood studios unthreatened.

That has stirred the first outright concerns among financial investors about the company’s ability to fight deep-pocketed rivals, a feeling that was exacerbated by a shock slide in subscribers last quarter — the first in eight years.

Shares in the company have fallen 22 per cent since that report in mid-July. After yesterday’s third quarter results, they were back trading nearly 20 per cent higher overall on the year.

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“In the race to capture the major share of audience in the global market, nobody is close to where Netflix is,” said James Fattal, an analyst with financial markets platform Investing.com.

“Its original content for places like India and some European markets will mean the company will continue to be favoured in the early years of these streaming wars.”

Still, nine Wall Street brokerages cut their price target on the stock while one previous bull, Macquarie, downgraded its rating to neutral.

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Another house, Needham, projected the company would lose 10 million of its roughly 60 million US subscribers over the course of 2020 unless it lowers prices, and several analysts noted the company’s own “prudent” estimates for subscriber growth into the end of 2019.

“In some ways Netflix has defied the naysayers in Q3, coming close enough to guidance and delivering impressive revenue and earnings growth,” Macquarie analysts said.

“We think it will be hard... to grow much more in the US, and we suspect pricing power is limited.” — Reuters