Texarkana Gazette

business briefs

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NEW YORK—The company that runs the beleaguere­d MoviePass

discount service for movie tickets is being investigat­ed by the New York Attorney General on allegation­s that it misled investors.

Parent company Helios and Matheson of New York said in a prepared statement that it is aware of the investigat­ion, but that it believes, “our public disclosure­s have been complete, timely and truthful and we have not misled investors.”

The investigat­ion was first reported by CNBC.

Helios and Matheson has struggled financiall­y and is facing class-action lawsuits filed on behalf of investors claiming the company failed to disclose aspects of a business model that were unsustaina­ble.

MoviePass drew in millions of subscriber­s, luring them with a $10 monthly rate. But that proved costly. Because MoviePass typically pays theaters the full cost of tickets—$15 or more in big cities—a single movie can put the service in the red. At one point Helios and Matheson had to take out a $5 million emergency loan to pay its payment processors after missed payments resulted in service outages.

Over the summer MoviePass walked back a planned 50 percent price increase following a subscriber backlash. But the company imposed a cap of three movies per month, instead of one every day.

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