Speaking as a guest on CNBC's "Squawk Alley" segment, Olson said the last few quarters have been "rough" for Netflix, but Monday's report could show an improvement in trends.
Olson explained there have been several media and analyst reports that suggested Netflix's domestic net additions will fall short of the company's own guidance of 300,000 net adds. While this theory might prove to play out, Netflix could benefit from the "expectations game" at a time when investor expectation is already low.
"There has been so much talk about them missing the domestic net sub add number that I think it's unlikely that a slight miss there would have any real impact on the stock assuming international stays strong," Olson said.
Olson continued that investors are expecting incremental transparency from Netflix in terms of spending on content. Nevertheless, the streaming video segment is a growing market; there is a leader in the space, and that leader is Netflix.
Olson also pointed out that Netflix's library of video is shrinking, but the company is only dropping its "lower tiered content" and keeping "quality content that is bringing in viewers."
"Ultimately this is the right strategy," the analyst concluded. "You want to have a unique offering and that is the way to do it."
At last check, Netflix was down 1.49 percent at $99.96.
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