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And with the sound of Wall Street's opening bell, Netflix quickly dipped below its 52 week low, opening at $141.40 but falling within a few seconds under $140. [
NASDAQ:NFLX] Over the past two months the company watched subscribers leave along with 55% of its market cap from the same time period -- which now places their valuation at its 52 week low of $7.46B. On July 12, 2011, just one day prior to Netflix's all-time high price of 304.79, the company announced a radically different corporate structure and also raised the price of the most popular subscription plan by 60%. Sure, it's still the top consumer of internet bandwidth and the de facto leader in video streaming services, but the company's stock has lost a year of growth in a matter of two months, or rather, two decisions.
Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/PRIbMvc7t2w/
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