Los Angeles Times

At AMC Theatres, a fade to red, not black

The chain’s loss tops half a billion dollars; revenue is down 99%.

- By Ryan Faughnder

AMC Theatres, the world’s largest cinema operator, lost $561 million in its most recent quarter as revenue collapsed because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The Leawood, Kan.based exhibitor, owned by China’s Dalian Wanda Group, has been hammered by the coronaviru­s crisis, which has kept its 630 U.S. theaters closed since midMarch. Revenue was $18.9 million during the three months that ended in June, down 99% from the same period a year ago, the company said Thursday.

Second-quarter earnings were even worse than Wall Street anticipate­d. AMC lost $5.38 a share, compared with the average $4.34-pershare loss predicted by analysts polled by FactSet.

AMC’s stock was little changed in after-hours trading, after closing essentiall­y flat at $4.14.

“It should be no surprise to anyone that with our operations shut the world over, and almost no revenues coming in the door, this was the most challengin­g quarter in the 100-year history of AMC,” Chief Executive Adam Aron said.

The earnings release comes about a week after AMC and Universal Pictures made a historic deal to shorten the theatrical window for certain movies to as little as 17 days, compared with the average 90 days for big Hollywood films. After the window, Universal can offer its films for $20 rental on demand, with AMC taking a cut of the digital video revenue.

“We now will be cut in, included and paid when Universal movies go to the home early,” Aron said.

During the public health crisis, AMC moved to improve its balance sheet by restructur­ing $2.6 billion in debt last month. The company raised $300 million in additional cash to help it withstand the shutdowns.

It remains to be seen how quickly customers will return to the cinema once the major chains start to screen films again, with AMC targeting mid- to late August for its theaters to reopen.

Analysts don’t expect attendance to return to normal until there’s a widely available vaccine for the coronaviru­s. Still, Aron said that even if attendance is 25% of what it would normally be, it would be better for theaters to be open than closed.

“I think we’ve survived the corona crisis,” Aron said. “And now we just have to get back to running the company really well.”

Theater owners have been waiting for new Hollywood movies to show before they return to normal business operations.

After shifting the release date for “Tenet” multiple times, Warner Bros. recently said it would release the Christophe­r Nolan film internatio­nally late this month, followed by a staggered domestic release in certain U.S. cities starting just before Labor Day weekend.

Though Aron called Warner Bros.’ “Tenet” decision “heroic” for exhibitors, he did not criticize Walt Disney Co. for announcing a very different plan for the release of “Mulan.”

In what was widely seen as a blow to cinemas, Disney on Tuesday stunned the industry by announcing that its live-action version of “Mulan” would largely skip theaters and be available on streaming service Disney+ for a $30 fee starting Sept. 4. The movie will play in theaters only in countries where Disney+ is not available and where cinemas are open, the Burbank-based company said.

Although he admitted that “we would have preferred that they kept ‘Mulan’ as a theatrical movie,” Aron added that the Disney move “reaffirms our wise and smart decision” to make the risky bet with Universal on premium video on demand.

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