Netflix And The Fickle Couch Potato [View in browser]( TOGETHER WITH:
Proprietary Data Insights Financial Pros Top Stock And ETF Searches This Month Rank Name Searches
#1 Invesco QQQ 3854
#2 AMC Entertainment 3549
#3 S&P 500 Index 2288
#4 Tesla 2278
#5 Nvidia 1773 The Stocks And ETFs Investors Are Searching This Month At The Juice, we collect proprietary data that tells us the stocks and ETFs investors are searching for. At the top of every newsletter, we break down this data, usually by industry. Today, we decided to look at searches across the investing universe. And how about that? A little bit of everything. Right in line with our recent [discussions]( about striking a balance between speculative investing, owning high-flyers and buying and holding index funds: - 3,854 searches for the ETF that tracks the Nasdaq 100 (QQQ)
- 3,549 searches for the speculative meme stock of all speculative meme stocks (AMC)
- 2,288 searches for the ETF that tracks the S&P 500 (SPY)
- 2,278 searches for high-flying $1,000/share Tesla (TSLA) If I was building a portfolio today, Iâd model it after this search data with additions to diversify each category: - Relatively conservative 60% allocation to index funds and [dividend stocks](
- More aggressive 35% allocation to strong high flyers such as TSLA, Apple (AAPL) and Amazon.com (AMZN).
- Speculative 5% allocation to satisfy my FOMO and need for speed in stocks such as AMC. Just in case they pop again. Mind that portfolio weekly. Reinvest the dividends. Take profits on big moves (e.g., TSLA this week). And never, ever be greedy, especially on the speculative names. Of course, your age, penchant for risk, and overall financial condition dictates your precise strategy and exact allocations. Sponsored [Sell? Hold? Buy? 4-Digit âCash Out Codesâ can help you decide]( In this rollercoaster stock marketâ¦what stocks should you sell, continue to hold, or buy more of? There's an easy answer. Thanks to the discovery of a 4-digit code assigned to every publicly traded stock called "Cash Out Codes". By knowing this code, you can learn which stocks are currently screaming "Crash Alert!" [Click here to find out more]( Streaming TV Elon Musk Is Wrong About Netflix. We Know The Problem. Key Takeaways: - The problem with Netflix has everything to do with content.
- It has nothing to do with wokeness.
- Streaming TV fans are a fickle bunch, which makes one-trick platforms bad investments. My girlfriend and I watch a lot of TV. Much of it is what you might call trashy TV. So we know whatâs wrong with Netflix (NFLX). It has nothing to do with Elon Muskâs latest proclamation on Twitter. Elon Musk Is Wrong About Netflix Amid myriad news reports on Netflixâs massive subscriber losses, I have yet to come across a meaningful, real-life analysis that connects how you and I actually behave to the investment story (or lack thereof). Source: [Twitter]( Musk was likely referring to the controversy surrounding Dave Chappelleâs Netflix comedy special, which upset people inside the company, who considered some of Chappelleâs jokes transphobic and homophobic. Guess what? I was offended. However, Iâll only ever cancel Netflix when they stop offering content I want to watch. Endless dead-end browsing makes Netflix unwatchable. Not wokeness. Chappelle doesnât reflect Netflixâs values. You canât simply cancel a subscription because a streaming platform refuses to cancel somebody who offends you. Technically, you can, but why would you? I bet youâre like me. If you donât like Chappelle, you simply donât watch the guy. In fact - and Musk ought to know this - the Chappelle controversy might be the best thing that happened to Netflix in the last few quarters. It got us talking about the platform again. Netflix Has A Fickle Couch Potato Problem Thereâs a reason why HBO Max and Hulu are adding subscribers as Netflix loses them. Thatâs right - HBO Max increased its base by 3 million subscribers - to nearly 77 million - since last quarter. Hulu added 1.5 million subs to 45.3 million. Netflix expects to lose 2 million subscribers by summer, after saying goodbye to 200,000 last quarter. The best things to binge right now are not on Netflix. Plain and simple. - Minx (great, edgy, 70s porn mustache meets feminism thowback) - HBO Max
- The Flight Attendant (season two dropped last night) - HBO Max
- The Thing About Pam (trashy, but canât stop watching) - Hulu
- 90-Day Fiance (super trashy, but canât stop watching!) - Discovery+
- Severance (maybe the best show on right now) - Apple TV Thank us later for those amazing streaming recommendations. I could name names all day, but you get the point. If you lie in bed at night looking for something to watch like my girlfriend and I do, you probably concluded you only keep Netflix for a couple things. For us, itâs Seinfeld reruns and the return of Somebody Feed Phil and Stranger Things next month. Other than that, all we do is browse Netflix aimlessly and complain about the crappy selection lately. And thatâs really the point - itâs so easy to cancel Netflix and spend time elsewhere, particularly when the plethora of streaming choices elsewhere exceeds our most lofty post-cable TV expectations. With inflation biting at bank accounts, consumers will bounce when the selection sucks and resubscribe when a streaming service releases something that gives them more perceived bang for their limited entertainment buck. The Bottom Line: Netflix is a one-trick pony. At this point, itâs a pure play on streaming. This makes it a bad bet for investors. You donât want to invest in companies who operate with a singular offering in a fickle consumer space. And itâs not just about loyalty. Thereâs no other part of Netflixâs business that complements or can make up for problems on the streaming side. This isnât the case, obviously, at Apple or with a company we didnât mention. Disney (DIS) is more than Disney+, which, for the record, added 11.8 million subs last quarter to reach 129.8 million. The real hope if you want to make a long-term bull case for Netflix? Advertising. And leveraging this much-anticipated move into something bigger than advertising. This would add another row or two to Netflixâs revenue line items. It could make the stock attractive to investors again. Itâs something weâll keep thinking about at The Juice and discuss with you more in the coming weeks. News & Insights Freshly Squeezed - [The Pros And Cons Of Lululemon Setting Such Audacious Sales Goals](
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- [If You Invested $1,000 In Netflix The Last Time The Company Lost Subscribers, Hereâs How Much Youâd Have Now]( [We want to hear from you! Let us know your thoughts by clicking here]( #
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