KEY POINTS
  • Stocks of other streaming video companies fell in extended trading on Tuesday after Netflix revealed it had lost subscribers during the first quarter, its first decline in more than a decade.
  • Netflix warned that it could start to crack down on password sharing, which could increase its number of paid subscribers.
  • As the economy reopens in the U.S. and people spend more time out of their houses, it's almost as if the pandemic never happened — at least in terms of the relative weakness of Netflix stock.

The stock prices of streaming video companies fell in extended trading on Tuesday after Netflix released earnings that showed the sector leader lost subscribers for the first time in more than a decade.

Shares of Disney dropped as much as 5%, while Roku fell 6% after-hours after rising nearly 8% during regular trading. Warner Bros. Discovery, the owner of HBO Max, was off about 4%, and Paramount (formerly ViacomCBS) declined nearly 6%.