Marketdash

AMC Stock Hits All-Time Low Despite Box Office Success

MarketDash Editorial Team
5 hours ago
AMC Entertainment shares tumbled to a record low of $1.60 this week, even as the company posted its strongest pre-Christmas weekend since 2021 thanks to Avatar: Fire and Ash. The disconnect reveals Wall Street's focus on balance sheet fears over operational wins.

AMC Entertainment Holdings Inc. (AMC) is having one of those confusing moments where the business looks decent but the stock keeps sliding anyway. Shares hit a fresh all-time low of $1.60 this week, trading lower Friday morning despite what should be good news: James Cameron's Avatar: Fire and Ash just delivered AMC's strongest pre-Christmas weekend since 2021.

So what's going on? The movie is clearly working. Avatar: Fire and Ash has pulled in $483 million globally, and AMC specifically reported drawing over 4 million guests who generated $88 million domestically. Premium formats did the heavy lifting, with 3D and IMAX screenings accounting for roughly 67% of admissions revenue. That's the kind of high-margin business theater chains dream about.

AMC also made a strategic move by selling most of its stake in Hycroft Mining Holding Corporation (HYMC) for $24.1 million, redirecting that cash back into its core theater operations. CEO Adam Aron returned to full-time duties. On paper, things are moving in the right direction.

But Wall Street isn't buying it, literally. The stock keeps bumping into resistance around the $2.00 level, weighed down by one big worry: future dilution. An amended note agreement gives AMC the ability to issue up to $150 million in new stock starting in February 2026. That financial overhang is casting a long shadow over any operational wins, and investors seem more focused on what might happen to their ownership stakes than what's happening at the box office right now.

Not everyone is running for the exits, though. Billionaire Robert Citrone of Discovery Capital Management just took a massive contrarian position, scooping up approximately 32.75 million shares. His bet appears to be that the market is overreacting and that AMC's equity is genuinely undervalued relative to its box office recovery potential.

As of Friday, AMC shares were down 1.19% at $1.655, trading at a new 52-week low. The technical picture isn't pretty either. Support sits at $1.63, and if that level breaks, there's not much underneath to catch the stock. On the upside, resistance around $2.00 is likely to cap any rally attempts as sellers emerge.

The disconnect here is striking: strong weekend numbers and operational momentum on one side, existential balance sheet concerns on the other. For now, the fear of dilution is winning that battle, even as Avatar keeps packing theaters.

AMC Stock Hits All-Time Low Despite Box Office Success

MarketDash Editorial Team
5 hours ago
AMC Entertainment shares tumbled to a record low of $1.60 this week, even as the company posted its strongest pre-Christmas weekend since 2021 thanks to Avatar: Fire and Ash. The disconnect reveals Wall Street's focus on balance sheet fears over operational wins.

AMC Entertainment Holdings Inc. (AMC) is having one of those confusing moments where the business looks decent but the stock keeps sliding anyway. Shares hit a fresh all-time low of $1.60 this week, trading lower Friday morning despite what should be good news: James Cameron's Avatar: Fire and Ash just delivered AMC's strongest pre-Christmas weekend since 2021.

So what's going on? The movie is clearly working. Avatar: Fire and Ash has pulled in $483 million globally, and AMC specifically reported drawing over 4 million guests who generated $88 million domestically. Premium formats did the heavy lifting, with 3D and IMAX screenings accounting for roughly 67% of admissions revenue. That's the kind of high-margin business theater chains dream about.

AMC also made a strategic move by selling most of its stake in Hycroft Mining Holding Corporation (HYMC) for $24.1 million, redirecting that cash back into its core theater operations. CEO Adam Aron returned to full-time duties. On paper, things are moving in the right direction.

But Wall Street isn't buying it, literally. The stock keeps bumping into resistance around the $2.00 level, weighed down by one big worry: future dilution. An amended note agreement gives AMC the ability to issue up to $150 million in new stock starting in February 2026. That financial overhang is casting a long shadow over any operational wins, and investors seem more focused on what might happen to their ownership stakes than what's happening at the box office right now.

Not everyone is running for the exits, though. Billionaire Robert Citrone of Discovery Capital Management just took a massive contrarian position, scooping up approximately 32.75 million shares. His bet appears to be that the market is overreacting and that AMC's equity is genuinely undervalued relative to its box office recovery potential.

As of Friday, AMC shares were down 1.19% at $1.655, trading at a new 52-week low. The technical picture isn't pretty either. Support sits at $1.63, and if that level breaks, there's not much underneath to catch the stock. On the upside, resistance around $2.00 is likely to cap any rally attempts as sellers emerge.

The disconnect here is striking: strong weekend numbers and operational momentum on one side, existential balance sheet concerns on the other. For now, the fear of dilution is winning that battle, even as Avatar keeps packing theaters.