This Movie Maven's IPO About to Hit the Big Screen

Updated
This Movie Maven's IPO About to Hit the Big Screen

As digital cinema sweeps the entertainment industry and the movie industry comes off a record-breaking summer with ticket sales of $4.7 billion projected by the end of the Labor Day weekend, there remains a nagging fear that 2013 will be a big-screen bomb as theaters witness a 3% decline in attendance.

Much like the rest of the industry's hit-or-miss nature this year, AMC Entertainment Holdings prepares to enter the public markets again with a $400 million IPO, the third time it's attempted to go public since 2007. This time analysts are more hopeful, however, believing Hollywood's got it more right than wrong and that the theater chain is poised to capture that growth.

While it's not exactly the best of times for moviemaking, as inflated box office receipts were largely due to ticket price increases of 3.2%, studios are still struggling to come up with a consistent lineup of hits. Audiences praised low-budget horror flicks like The Conjuring, which BoxOfficeMojo says has raked in $134 million stateside on a $20 million production budget, but panned big-budget films like The Lone Ranger, which cost $215 million to make but only managed to see $88 million in domestic receipts.


The manic moves have movie houses scrambling for customers. As the moviegoing experience gets consolidated into fewer and fewer hands, the environment becomes more competitive for them in attracting theatergoers to their shows. Regal Entertainment , which has 7,344 screens across 577 theaters, is the largest theater operator in the country. It has ratcheted up the "premium" movie experience through its partnership with IMAX for big-screen entertainment across 123 screens, which includes its own RPX brand, a custom-built environment featuring luxurious seats with high-back headrests, giant immersive screens illuminated by high-quality digital projectors, and state-of-the-art sound systems.

Similarly, Cinemark Holdings , with about 5,800 screens in over 500 theaters, has launched its XD large-screen format several years ago, and they now comprise 88 screens in the U.S. and 137 globally, with 20 to 25 more to be introduced by the end of the year. The XD experience features large wall-to-wall and ceiling-to-floor screens.

AMC, though, tries to go them one better. They've driven their dine-in-theater concept, with wide seats with extra legroom, an ability to recline, and food service, all of which takes the idea of "dinner and a movie" to new levels.

In its SEC filing, AMC says the first four locations they opened offered an 11% cash-on-cash return, but the next seven they opened saw those returns surge to 34%. They represent just 3% of the total number of the 343 theaters operated, but account for 10% of its entire food and beverage revenues. Not surprisingly, AMC plans to open another 20 over the next five years.

That's the same route Carmike Cinema is following, offering giant screens, plush seating, and gourmet concessions in its large format "BigD" auditorium. It's making use of Barco's Auro 11.1 technology that offers three layers of sound: surround, height, and overhead.

While this is an improvement in theater sound quality, Dolby Labs has pushed the technology even further as its Atmos experience allows for hundreds of points from which sound can emanate. Its limitation, however, comes down to the number of speakers a theater has installed and how the sound technician assigns sound to any particular space. Some 15 AMC ETX auditoriums take advantage of the Dolby Atmos technology.

As the second-largest operator in the U.S., and despite having 40% fewer theaters, AMC still generates about 90% of the revenues of its larger rival. Regal recorded $1.485 billion over the first two quarters; AMC notched $1.340 billion in the same time frame.

Although many lament the state of Hollywood these days, stuck as it is on remakes, comic book action figures, and gimmicks -- 3-D being the more notable trick to hike ticket prices -- the industry is still moving forward and generating more revenues than ever.

AMC's parent, Dalian Wanda Group, the Chinese conglomerate that bought the theater chain last year, hasn't really committed to an offering size just yet with the $400 million price tag serving as a placeholder, and it will remain in control of AMC through its ownership of the theater's Class B shares. However, when the theater chain does hit the public markets, there's no reason to think it won't be a blockbuster that will put its name up in lights.

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The article This Movie Maven's IPO About to Hit the Big Screen originally appeared on Fool.com.

Fool contributor Rich Duprey owns shares of Dolby Laboratories. The Motley Fool recommends Dolby Laboratories and IMAX. The Motley Fool owns shares of IMAX. Try any of our Foolish newsletter services free for 30 days. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

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