Harvey Weinstein on Netflix: Buy Icahn, Sell Wall Street
NEW YORK (TheStreet) -- Academy Award winning producer Harvey Weinstein is ready to buy Carl Icahn and sell Wall Street when it comes to understanding the prospects of Netflix (NFLX) .
After the streaming movie pioneer pulled what Weinstein called an industry "game changer" by agreeing to a multi-year content exclusivity agreement with Disney (DIS) , the co-founder of Miramax Films and current co-chair of The Weinstein Company is ready call winners and losers on Wall Street when it comes to assessing Netflix.
In a Wednesday panel discussion at the UBS Global Media Conference with Netflix Chief Content Officer Ted Sarandos, Weinstein was ready to forgive Carl Icahn on previous losing media industry bets after the activist investor took a near a 10% stake in Netflix this fall, which has gained sharply with the company's improving prospects.
Weinstein appeared less forgiving to Wall Street investors, who he said badly misread Netflix's potential earlier in the year.
Icahn won praise from Weinstein for backing Netflix ahead of the company's announcement of a major content agreement with Disney. In contrast, Weinstein indicated selloffs in Netflix shares when the company didn't renew exclusive content agreements with Liberty Media(LMCA) -controlled Starz and Epix reflected the short-term thinking of some investors.
"That Starz deal, when you didn't renew
CCO Sarandos said Netflix's hesitance to cut new deals with Starz and Epix had to do with a lack of exclusivity or weak demand for their content.
In the case of Disney, Sarandos said at the conference it marks a shift in Netflix's business model to focus spending on exclusive content.
In fact, Sarandos indicated that Netflix could eventually make self-produced original content, when asked by Weinstein. Currently, Netflix is the only distributor of Arrested Development Season 4 and it is set to release House of Cards, an exclusive series, in Feb. 2013.