Helios And Matheson Jumps As MoviePass Exceeds Initial Projections

Shares of Helios and Matheson Analytics (HMNY) jumped in morning trading after the company said its MoviePass theater subscription services surpassed over 600,000 paying monthly subscribers this month.

MOVIEPASS EXCEEDING PROJECTIONS: Helios and Matheson, a majority owner of MoviePass, said this morning that the subscriber base for the movie theater subscription service surpassed 600,000 paying monthly subscribers as of October 18, compared to about 20,000 as of August 14. The company said the continued growth has exceeded initial expectations. The company also said that its subscriber churn rate has been shrinking, to 2.4% in month two from 4.2% in month one. Based on current churn rates, MoviePass said monthly subscriber retention is above 96% and average paying monthly subscriber life expectancy is 46.8 months. "Month after month we aim to improve our service with faster card delivery, improved application updates, and an easier-to-use website. We believe our strategy is paying off in terms of increased satisfaction, reduced churn, and faster growth," MoviePass CEO Mitch Lowe said in a statement. "When you apply computer science and machine learning to an industry that we believe has lacked significant innovation, useful patterns start to emerge," said Helios and Matheson Chairman and CEO Ted Farnsworth.

WHAT'S NOTABLE: On August 15, Helios and Matheson announced that it had entered into a definitive agreement to acquire a majority stake of MoviePass, which is led by Lowe, a Netflix (NFLX) co-founder, and former Redbox president. Helios and Matheson also introduced a new monthly movie ticket subscription of $9.95, allowing customers to get into one showing every day at any theater in the U.S. that accepts debit cards for about the price of a single ticket each month. The following month, MoviePass subscribers rose to over 400,000 from less than 20,000. Earlier this month, Helios and Matheson increased its ownership stake in MoviePass to 53.71% from 53%. Helios and Matheson Analytics shareholders still have to approve the company's purchase of its majority stake in MoviePass. Following the price cut to $9.95, MoviePass said its website was overwhelmed by the volume of traffic from interested customers, forcing some theatergoers to wait almost a month before their passes arrived in the mail. At the time, Lowe said he "totally underestimated demand," but the company boosted its team to 35 to deal with the backlog.

CITRON, STREETSWEEPER CAUTIOUS: Some are cautious on Helios and Matheson as shares have jumped over 1000% since announcing the acquisition of a majority stake in MoviePass. Citron Research tweeted on October 11 that Helios and Matheson's stock will "trade back to $20 Retail investors are warned. You might like product but $1+bill it isn't. Giving away $1 for .90 no biz." A day later, Citron tweeted that "Don't like to stay short companies that are expected to lose money high borrow $ hit tgt price in one day. all timing." Helios and Matheson has also been mentioned cautiously by TheStreetSweeper.

PRICE ACTION: Helios and Matheson, while off earlier highs, is still up about 9% in morning trading to $14.53.

 

How did you like this article? Let us know so we can better customize your reading experience.

Comments

Leave a comment to automatically be entered into our contest to win a free Echo Show.
Michael Molman 6 years ago Contributor's comment

Very interesting I have not focused much on this industry. My major worry is that theater traffic seems to be in decline with box office sales increasingly disappointing. How will this affect future profits at companies like #HMNY

Ayelet Wolf 6 years ago Member's comment

Are you sure theater traffic is on the decline? If $HMNY exceeded expecations in terms of movie goers, maybe it's on the upswing, no?

Michael Molman 6 years ago Contributor's comment

As far as I know theater traffic is at a 2 decade lows and the summer box office was abysmal. I figure the theater industry is being disrupted by technology and changing consumer trends.

www.bloomberg.com/.../after-1-3-billion-stock-collapse-hollywood-s-picture-blurs