Netflix (Nasdaq:NFLX) and Viacom (NYSE:VIA-B) have entered a deal for the Canadian market to stream a portion of its film library.
The Canadian arm of Netflix just got a little longer, as the company announced a fresh content deal with Viacom's Paramount studio for streaming Up North. This five-year contract, with unspecified financial heft, will stream both new releases and back-catalog films to Canadian subscribers. The deal includes 350 titles, starting with immediate access to Iron Man 2 and The Curious Case of Benjamin Button.
That's far from an all-access pass to Paramount's library, given that IMDB lists more than 3,700 feature films with Paramount among their producers and rightsholders. On the other hand, the Canadian service has been devoid of serious hit material so far, and adding films like Titanic and Wayne's World surely can't hurt the quest to sign up millions of hockey-loving, poutine-cooking subscribers, eh?
And then there's the ally angle. Paramount spokesman Hal Richardson is positively gleeful about this contract, in stark contrast to the verbal barbs Warner CEO Jeff Bewkes has hurled. "We are especially delighted that this arrangement serves to broaden the growing relationship with our friends at Netflix," Richardson said. You won't hear that kind of language from Bewkes anytime soon.
Netflix closed Tuesday at $237.38, gaining $0.06, or 0.03 percent. Viacom closed at $46.27, up $0.79, or 1.74 percent.
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