Here's an interesting puzzle: people are actually going to movie theaters again, but AMC Entertainment Holdings Inc. (AMC) stock keeps sinking anyway. The shares have dropped more than 50% year to date, hovering around $1.75 near their 52-week lows. Meanwhile, the company just logged its best pre-Christmas weekend since 2021, with over four million customers showing up globally for Avatar: Fire and Ash.
Someone noticed the disconnect.
The Billionaire Contrarian Play
Recent regulatory filings reveal that billionaire hedge fund manager Robert Citrone, who runs Discovery Capital Management, bought into AMC in a big way. He picked up roughly 32.75 million shares at an average price around $2.16, making it nearly 4% of his reported portfolio. That's not a trivial position for a stock that Wall Street has mostly abandoned.
This doesn't smell like a meme stock gamble. It looks more like a calculated bet on distressed assets with asymmetric upside potential.
Box Office Strength With Structural Questions
The latest Avatar film pulled in $88 million domestically and $345 million worldwide. Premium formats like IMAX and Dolby Cinema accounted for an outsized portion of AMC's admissions revenue, which actually matters quite a bit. These high-margin screens represent one of the few ways AMC can improve profitability without building more theaters.
But one strong weekend doesn't magically fix deeper operational challenges.
Dilution Concerns Persist
AMC recently amended its exchangeable note agreement, opening the door to as much as $150 million in future at-the-market stock offerings starting in February 2026. The company also paid a $6.25 million consent fee in AMC shares, adding another dose of dilution risk to a shareholder base that's already been through the wringer.
Reading the Trade
Citrone's investment suggests the market might be overdoing the pessimism. AMC still operates roughly 860 theaters with 9,600 screens globally. If box office momentum holds and the dilution taps stay off for a while, the stock doesn't necessarily need a complete transformation to rally. Sometimes you just need fewer bad headlines.
Avatar brought the crowds back to theaters. Whether that's enough to lure investors back into the stock is the question Citrone is betting on.




