Like Netflix? Then You'll Love This Stock

This young company bears an eerie similarity to Netflix in its early days of streaming. And in the ways that it differs, it may be even better.

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Longtime Netflix (NASDAQ:NFLX) shareholders have plenty of reasons to love the streaming giant. Yet there's another company that looks today a lot like the entertainment giant did back in 2007, when it was just getting started in video streaming.

That company is Peloton Interactive (NASDAQ:PTON).

What makes Netflix great

Netflix is the global leader in the subscription video on demand (SVOD) business, with 193 million paid streaming memberships as of the end of June. Three key factors have made it an exceptional investment:

https://g.foolcdn.com/image/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fg.foolcdn.com%2Feditorial%2Fimages%2F590817%2Fpeloton-bike-lifestyle-01.jpg&w=700&op=resize
Image source: Peloton Interactive.

Peloton's parallels

One might not notice at first glance, but several key aspects of Peloton's business model are similar to that of Netflix.

How Peloton is different...and perhaps even better

There are several differences between the two companies as well. For example, customers who want to fully participate in the interactive Peloton experience have to buy one of its bikes or treadmills up front. That makes it more difficult for consumers to try Peloton. Netflix, of course, requires no such upfront investment by the customer.   

At the same time, that hardware investment provides Peloton with a healthy gross profit at the start of the subscriber relationship. It also drives down subscriber churn. After all, once a person pays $1,895 for a Peloton bike, they're less likely to balk at paying $39 per month for the subscription. As a result, Peloton's Connected Fitness monthly churn was only 0.52% last quarter, which implies an impressive average subscriber lifetime of 16 years.

Another difference is that many Netflix subscribers also subscribe to other SVOD services, including Amazon Prime Video, HBO Max, or Disney's Disney+ and Hulu. In contrast, most Peloton users are unlikely to subscribe to other interactive home fitness platforms. In that sense, its business -- while admittedly having a smaller and less certain addressable market than Netflix -- may lend itself to more of a winner-take-all or winner-take-most dynamic. 

Finally, Netflix will likely need to spend greater and greater sums on content to meet the varying needs of an array of demographic groups globally. Annual content spending could easily reach $20 billion or $30 billion in not too many years.

In contrast, fitness content is much more of a niche category and is less expensive to produce. It would be hard to imagine Peloton spending much more than a couple hundred million dollars a year on content, regardless of how many subscribers it eventually has. That should allow even more rapid margin expansion than Netflix.

Netflix investors should absolutely hang on to their shares, but they should also consider buying Peloton during this recession, considering the qualities it shares with that high-performing entertainment company, as well as its additional advantages.