As a baby and teenager, one among my favourite issues to do was going to the films. Sitting in a darkish theater, watching the newest smash hit movie, consuming popcorn, and consuming soda, was a good way to move the time. So it pains me the stance that I’ve to take on the subject of AMC Leisure Holdings (NYSE:AMC), a large world operator of film theaters. For a while now, I’ve been bearish on the enterprise. Its troubles actually started with the COVID-19 pandemic. And regardless that that’s now lengthy over, the agency continues to wrestle from low attendance charges pushed largely by the delayed impression of employee strikes in Hollywood final 12 months.
In my final article concerning the firm, revealed in Might of this 12 months, I ended up downgrading the inventory from a ‘promote’ to a ‘robust promote’. This got here after shares had skyrocketed 180.7% since my prior article on the agency in what many have thought-about to be the second meme inventory rally. My conclusion on the time was that this transfer larger tremendously overvalued the enterprise given the troubles that it’s dealing with. And to this point, that decision has confirmed to be appropriate. Since my most up-to-date article, shares are down 17.9% whereas the S&P 500 is up 6.6%. And since I first rated the corporate a ’promote’ again in January of 2021, shares are down 93% whereas the S&P 500 is up 51%.
Fascinating developments
Basically talking, AMC Leisure is struggling an amazing deal. For instance, we want solely take a look at the newest information supplied by administration, which might cowl the second quarter of the 2024 fiscal 12 months. Income throughout that point was $1.03 billion. That is a drop of 23.5% in comparison with the $1.35 billion the corporate generated only one 12 months earlier. This was pushed by a plunge in attendance. Within the US, attendance at its theaters totaled 36.49 million within the second quarter. That was down precipitously from the 50.02 million reported the identical time final 12 months. Worldwide attendance, in the meantime, dropped from 16.35 million to 13.52 million. All informed, world attendance for the corporate declined 24.6% 12 months over 12 months.
A part of this may be attributed to a decline within the variety of theaters and, by extension, screens that the corporate has in operation. Within the US, the variety of theaters dropped from 569 to 554. And internationally, the quantity dropped from 337 to 332. Collectively, this introduced the variety of theaters down globally from 906 to 886, with the variety of screens falling from 10,120 to 9,889. For a while now, administration has been closing down underperforming areas. This is sensible when you think about the issues the business has gone by way of and the truth that the corporate has had points relating to income and money flows. I imply, between 2021 and 2023, the corporate noticed internet working money outflows of $1.66 billion. This image had improved from one 12 months to the following, largely due to a restoration following the COVID-19 pandemic. Nevertheless it has not improved sufficient with the intention to make the corporate wholesome once more.
One other drawback for the corporate this 12 months has been a discount within the variety of main movies launched by studios. As I detailed in my most up-to-date article concerning the agency, the variety of movies deliberate for the 2024 field workplace was decrease than what was seen within the prior 12 months. Employee strikes had been liable for this, with a forecast for the variety of movies coming from all manufacturing studios anticipated to say no from 150 final 12 months to 128 this 12 months. I do truly assume that there’s some glimmer of hope right here. I say this as a result of there have been a few main field workplace hits recently. Each of the movies that come to thoughts are courtesy of The Walt Disney Firm (DIS). Globally, Inside Out 2 has grossed $1.63 billion, making it the best grossing animated movie in historical past. The whole home field workplace for it was $642.5 million. After which, there was the third installment of the Deadpool collection, Deadpool & Wolverine, which is presently at $1.14 billion globally, with $546.8 million of that coming from the home field workplace. This makes it the best grossing R-rated movie ever.
These successes will doubtless encourage manufacturing studios to start out investing extra in theatrical content material. And I might think about that, by someday subsequent 12 months, this could enable a extra significant and sustained restoration for the business. That does not imply, in fact, that there cannot be some profit this 12 months. In a press launch issued on July twenty ninth, AMC Leisure acknowledged that over 6 million moviegoers watched a movie at one among its theaters within the US between July twenty sixth and July twenty eighth. This made it the corporate’s highest weekend of attendance and admissions income to this point this 12 months. Moreover, it was the best weekend for meals and beverage income that the corporate had seen since 2019.
On the underside line, efficiency achieved by AMC Leisure has been fairly dismal. In the newest quarter, the corporate generated a internet lack of $32.8 million. That is far worse than the $8.6 million achieve reported one 12 months earlier. Working money move worsened from unfavourable $13.4 million to unfavourable $34.6 million. If we alter for adjustments in working capital, it worsened from $37.3 million to unfavourable $64.3 million. And eventually, EBITDA for the corporate plummeted from $182.5 million to $29.4 million. Within the chart above, you may as well see monetary outcomes for the primary half of this 12 months relative to the identical time final 12 months. The second quarter weak spot was half of a bigger pattern, not a worn off.
If AMC Leisure had little to no debt, I would not be as involved as I presently am. However the truth of the matter is that, as of the newest quarter, the corporate had $3.57 billion of internet debt on its books. Curiously, debt has remained in a reasonably slender vary between 2021 and the newest quarter of this 12 months. And in reality, the present degree of debt is definitely decrease than what the corporate had within the first quarter of this 12 months and it is decrease than it had on the finish of any of the final three fiscal years. Administration has achieved nicely in that regard. Nevertheless, this has come at a value. And that price has been vital shareholder dilution. From the tip of 2021 by way of the current day, inventory issuances made by the corporate resulted in shareholder dilution of 70.3%. This isn’t sustainable in the long term. And in reality, with the corporate’s market capitalization at $1.80 billion as of this writing, there’s not way more that the corporate may elevate to deal with debt with out spooking markets.
Administration has been making different efforts to get the corporate by way of these troublesome occasions. Earlier this 12 months, in late July to be exact, administration engaged in some refinancing transactions. They primarily had been in a position to swap out $1.1 billion value of present time period loans that had been supposed to return due in 2026, in addition to $100 million of second lien subordinated secured notes due in 2026 for $1.2 billion value of recent time period loans that can now come due in 2029. The corporate additionally issued simply over $414 million of exchangeable notes for money, with which it repurchased an equal quantity of second lien notes. These notes are exchangeable for 82.6 million shares of the corporate, however the firm additionally has the flexibility to problem as much as one other $100 million value for the aim of debt discount. Plus it has the flexibility to problem as much as one other $800 million of recent time period loans with the intention to repurchase present time period loans.
There are all kinds of various hypothetical eventualities that we may take a look at relating to these transactions and the impression they may have on the corporate’s backside line. The image is particularly sophisticated when you think about the flexibility for the corporate to pay a few of its curiosity in-kind (within the type of new notes versus money) if it so needs. But when we preserve issues easy and use solely the preliminary quantities that the corporate mentioned that they’d faucet into and we assume that each one curiosity from present notes and new notes are paid in money, then in response to my estimate, and factoring in present rates of interest, the agency would possibly solely should pay an additional $6.5 million in curiosity expense yearly, whereas concurrently getting the flexibility to push off a few of its debt for a number of years.
As I discussed already, the preliminary exchangeable notes issuance can lead to the issuance of as much as 82.6 million shares. However that is solely what we would should cope with out of the gate. If the corporate faucets into the total quantity that it could and pays the entire curiosity in-kind, then we’re taking a look at as much as 128.8 million shares that may be put out. On the low finish of this vary, we’d be taking a look at one other 20.4% dilution. And on the excessive finish, we’d be taking a look at one other 28.6%. That is higher than letting the corporate collapse. Nevertheless it’s actually not an enviable place to be in.
As for what shares would possibly truly be value, that is the magic query. We won’t actually worth an organization that’s constantly money move unfavourable. So one of the simplest ways to have a look at that is to see what sort of money flows could be wanted for the corporate to be pretty valued. Within the chart above, you may see eventualities the place the corporate could be buying and selling at 10 occasions or 20 occasions on both a value to adjusted working money move foundation or on an EV to EBITDA foundation. Even in the perfect case, the agency would want to have $90 million of adjusted working money move and $268.4 million value of EBITDA with the intention to be pretty valued at multiples of 20. However to place this in perspective, again in 2019, earlier than the COVID-19 pandemic actually had an impression on the agency, it was buying and selling at a value to adjusted working money move a number of of 1.4 and at an EV to EBITDA a number of of 8.5. So I discover it not possible that it could commerce a lot larger, if any larger, than this.
Takeaway
Basically talking, AMC Leisure is presently a large number. Administration has labored laborious to stop the ship from sinking. However this doesn’t suggest that issues are going nicely. The corporate will definitely proceed struggling this 12 months. The excellent news is that we’re beginning to see some true life once more within the theatrical area. If the enterprise can maintain on lengthy sufficient to get by way of that, it ought to be wonderful. However there is a distinction between being wonderful and being a pretty funding alternative. With an amazing quantity of debt on its books, money move issues, declining income, and vital shareholder dilution in prior years, I’ve to say that the inventory seems to be to be, nonetheless, a ‘robust promote’.