Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

PVR wants producers to pick cinemas over OTT

- Bloomberg feedback@livemint.com

NEW DELHI: PVR Ltd is in talks with Bollywood producers to release their movies in cinema halls now rather than on streaming sites like those run by Netflix Inc. and Amazon.com Inc., now that the pandemic is easing in India.

The country’s biggest cinema operator, which runs about 835 screens across 71 cities, is currently operating most theatres at half capacity due to Covid-related restrictio­ns. However, it sees benefits in the “age-old strategy” of movies first coming to the big screen before being monetised on other platforms.

“This applies more to big films, where the yield per eyeball in theatre is still the highest as compared to all the other distributi­on platforms,” Kamal Gianchanda­ni, PVR’s chief of strategy, said in an earnings call last week.

A number of Indian films starring top actors such as Amitabh Bachchan, Akshay Kumar and Vidya Balan opted for streaming platform release in 2020 as theatres were shuttered by shelter-at-home rules.

Post reopening, Christophe­r Nolan-directed science fiction Tenet and superhero movie Wonder Woman were the only prominent releases before Tamil action thriller Master opened in theatres last week.

“We are hopeful that Master will be a case study based on which you will see—over the next few weeks—the Bollywood film guys and more South

THE COMPANY SAID IT HAS SUFFICIENT LIQUIDITY TO MEET ITS TOTAL DEBT AS WELL AS INTEREST OBLIGATION­S FOR THE NEXT FEW MONTHS AT LEAST

Indian regional guys planning the release calendar of the films which are currently ready,” PVR’s chief financial officer Nitin Sood said.

PVR’s shares, which snapped eight years of gains to fall about 30% in 2020, have risen almost 14% this year. The stock has 20 buy calls, six holds and four sells among analysts tracked by Bloomberg.

The Gurugram-based company reported a loss of ₹49.1

crore in the three months ended December compared with a profit of ₹36.3 crore a year ago. The loss was, however, smaller than the ₹21.3 lakh Bloomberg consensus estimate.

PVR also said it has “reasonable liquidity” to meet debt and interest obligation­s for the next few months.

Gianchanda­ni, who is also the top executive of PVR’s movie production and distributi­on business, said major costs such as fees charged by top actors haven’t dropped for producers despite the pandemic-induced slowdown, and therefore, movie makers will seek better returns by releasing in cinemas first before less lucrative models like streaming.

“Clearly, the ability to take multiple bites out of the same route is a better strategy,” he said.

 ?? HT ?? PVR, which runs about 835 screens across 71 cities, is currently operating most theatres at half capacity.
HT PVR, which runs about 835 screens across 71 cities, is currently operating most theatres at half capacity.

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