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<title>InvestorTurf &#45; : OPINION</title>
<link>https://investorturf.com/rss/category/opinion</link>
<description>InvestorTurf &#45; : OPINION</description>
<dc:language>en</dc:language>
<dc:rights>Copyright 2025 InvestorTurf &#45; All Rights Reserved.</dc:rights>

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<title>AMC Needs a New Business Model, Not a Bigger Screen</title>
<link>https://investorturf.com/amc-needs-a-new-business-model-not-a-bigger-screen</link>
<guid>https://investorturf.com/amc-needs-a-new-business-model-not-a-bigger-screen</guid>
<description><![CDATA[ What if AMC could greenlight movies using real ticket demand before they’re made? A new “demand-locking” model could reduce risk, strengthen negotiating power, and create new revenue streams. ]]></description>
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<pubDate>Wed, 28 Jan 2026 21:17:22 +0000</pubDate>
<dc:creator>JasonNakamoto</dc:creator>
<media:keywords></media:keywords>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="p1"><span class="s1">AMC doesn’t need a bigger screen. It needs a bigger role.</span></p>
<p class="p1"><span class="s1">For two decades, the cinema business has been valued like a utility: ticket sales in, rent and labor out, and whatever margin is left depends on a slate of films no theater chain controls. That model worked when movies were the unquestioned center of home entertainment. In a world of infinite streaming choice, it has become a business that must absorb the risk of cultural volatility without owning much of the upside.</span></p>
<p class="p1"><span class="s1">AMC’s predicament is often framed as a balance-sheet story—debt, refinancing, and the long hangover of a pandemic that trained consumers to stay home. But the underlying strategic problem is simpler: theaters are largely paid after studios take the first bite, and they are exposed to demand swings that they can’t forecast with precision and can’t hedge.</span></p>
<p class="p1"><span class="s1">If <a href="https://investorturf.com/search?q=AMC" title="AMC entertainment " target="_blank" rel="noopener">AMC</a> wants a credible narrative beyond “more premium formats and better popcorn,” it needs to stop acting like the final checkpoint in the content supply chain and become something closer to a gatekeeper of demand.</span></p>
<p class="p1"><span class="s1">There is a way to do that, one that would be difficult for streamers to replicate and uncomfortable for studios to ignore.</span></p>
<p class="p1"><span class="s1">Call it the AMC Greenlight Market: a platform where audiences pre-commit to films and event content before they are produced, creating a pool of verified demand that can finance projects, de-risk distribution, and give AMC an ownership-like participation in the very content that fills its screens.</span></p>
<p class="p1"><span class="s1">The conceptual leap is not crowdfunding in the Kickstarter sense. It is demand locking turning the cinema ticket from a last-minute purchase into a forward contract on attention. Consumers don’t “donate”; they place refundable “ticket locks” inside AMC’s app, reserving admission for projects that meet a threshold of support. If a project hits the threshold, the credit converts to tickets, premium seating, exclusives, or opening-night experiences. If it fails, the credit is refunded.</span></p>
<p class="p1"><span class="s1">In other words, AMC would not ask fans to gamble on art. It would ask them to pre-order an event.</span></p>
<p class="p1"><span class="s1">The implications are meaningful because theatres sit on an asset that streaming giants can’t easily manufacture: verified, high-intent attendance at physical scale. A view on a streaming platform can be passive, algorithmic, or inflated by autoplay. A cinema ticket is a purchase that forces intention and a willingness to leave the house. If AMC can aggregate that intent early months before production or marketing budgets are locked, it can change who bears risk in entertainment.</span></p>
<p class="p1"><span class="s1">Studios would dismiss this as a gimmick until they see the first data.</span></p>
<p class="p1"><span class="s1">A demand-locking marketplace would generate insight that makes current audience analytics look soft: how many people will pay in advance, at what price point, in which cities, with what sensitivity to casting announcements, trailers, or genre conventions. It would show the difference between social media noise and actual purchase intent. That dataset, because it’s tied to real money and real showtimes, would be valuable enough to reshape negotiating leverage.</span></p>
<p class="p1"><span class="s1">It could also reshape AMC’s revenue model, which has long been limited by its place in the value chain.</span></p>
<p class="p1"><span class="s1">Today, AMC earns from tickets, concessions, and occasional distribution arrangements for special events. Under a demand-locking model, AMC could add at least four scalable streams.</span></p>
<p class="p1"><span class="s1">First, platform economics. If AMC curates projects and takes a small fee only when a project crosses its greenlight threshold, it builds a transaction layer that is not directly dependent on weekly box office volatility.</span></p>
<p class="p1"><span class="s1">Second, distribution participation. Hitting a demand threshold could trigger a pre-negotiated distribution deal where AMC, having de-risked opening weekend through presales, secures a better margin, performance bonuses, or rights participation. Even modest participation across multiple projects creates a portfolio effect, something theatres rarely enjoy.</span></p>
<p class="p1"><span class="s1">Third, premium experiences. Demand-locking naturally sells high-margin add-ons: opening-night bundles, Q&amp;A events, limited collectibles, “fan credit” placements, and member-only screenings. This is where theatrical can outcompete streaming: scarcity, community, and the sense of occasion.</span></p>
<p class="p1"><span class="s1">Fourth, loyalty monetization. A-List becomes more than a discount plan; it becomes an access layer. Members could get earlier access to greenlight listings, lower pledge thresholds, better seating windows, or voting privileges on which concepts advance. That turns membership into infrastructure rather than promotion and reduces churn in a way that price cuts never will.</span></p>
<p class="p1"><span class="s1">Creators would have strong incentives to participate, especially outside the traditional studio system. For independent filmmakers, anime producers, comedians, and niche documentary teams, the most punishing part of the business is uncertainty: you can make a project, but you cannot guarantee distribution or a meaningful launch. Demand-locking offers a different promise: prove your audience exists, and a theatrical window arrives pre-sold.</span></p>
<p class="p1"><span class="s1">That could open a new lane of “cinema-first” content that studios have neglected: micro-budget horror that thrives on communal reaction, stand-up specials that benefit from a live audience, diaspora-focused films that can be targeted city by city, and limited-run event series pilots that audiences effectively commission through presales.</span></p>
<p class="p1"><span class="s1">None of this is without risk. A greenlight marketplace could become a low-quality content dump, a marketing circus, or a refund-management headache. It could also trigger legal scrutiny if it blurs into financial participation. But those risks are manageable with design choices: strict curation, refundable consumption credits rather than profit-sharing, transparent deadlines, identity verification, and a phased rollout that begins with event cinema where production timelines are short and delivery risk is low.</span></p>
<p class="p1"><span class="s1">The biggest resistance would come from the incumbents’ studios and streamers because a transparent demand market undermines their advantage: control over what gets made and how success is measured. Hollywood has long relied on opacity, narrative, and marketing muscle to create inevitability around projects. A marketplace that shows raw purchase intent in real time would reprice that power.</span></p>
<p class="p1"><span class="s1">Which is precisely why AMC should pursue it.</span></p>
<p class="p1"><span class="s1">The chain’s long-term vulnerability is not that consumers don’t like movies; it’s that AMC has been stuck as a downstream participant in an upstream business. The only durable escape is to move upstream without trying to become a traditional studio by becoming the entity that makes demand legible, tradable, and actionable.</span></p>
<p class="p1"><span class="s1">If AMC can build a system where audiences effectively “order” content into existence, it will have created a new category: the demand-locked distributor. That is a strategy Wall Street can model, lenders can understand, and competitors can’t easily copy without owning thousands of screens.</span></p>
<p class="p1"><span class="s1">In a market obsessed with content supply, the scarce asset is no longer production capacity. It is guaranteed attention.</span></p>
<p class="p1"><span class="s1">AMC has the physical network where attention still shows up in person. The question is whether it has the imagination to turn that network into a demand engine that doesn’t just play the next movie but helps decide what the next movie is.</span></p>]]> </content:encoded>
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<title>Investors calling for temporary Ban on Short Selling in the United States Stock Market</title>
<link>https://investorturf.com/investors-calling-for-temporary-ban-on-short-selling-in-the-united-states-stock-market</link>
<guid>https://investorturf.com/investors-calling-for-temporary-ban-on-short-selling-in-the-united-states-stock-market</guid>
<description><![CDATA[ Investors are demanding regulators to temporarily ban short selling to investigate naked short selling in the U.S. markets ]]></description>
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<pubDate>Sun, 19 Nov 2023 14:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
<dc:creator>Meta News</dc:creator>
<media:keywords></media:keywords>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Numеrous rеtail invеstors and companiеs arе urging thе SEC, rеgulators, and thе U.S. govеrnmеnt to implеmеnt a <a href="https://www.change.org/p/implement-a-temporary-ban-on-short-selling-in-the-united-states-stock-market?recruiter=1322107595&amp;recruited_by_id=b22d0c70-864b-11ee-942a-79ec2980de12&amp;utm_source=share_petition&amp;utm_campaign=share_petition&amp;utm_term=petition_dashboard&amp;utm_medium=copylink&amp;utm_content=cl_sharecopy_37749242_en-US%3A8" target="_blank" rel="noopener">tеmporary ban on short sеlling</a> within thе Amеrican stock markеt.</p>
<p>This dеmand stеms from thе significant financial lossеs еxpеriеncеd by invеstors, amounting to millions of dollars, attributеd to nakеd short sеlling. Furthеrmorе, companiеs arе facing dirе consеquеncеs, bеing pushеd toward bankruptcy and forcеd to dеlist from еxchangеs duе to thеsе еxploitativе practicеs.</p>
<p>In thе yеar 2023 alonе, morе than 30 publicly listеd companiеs havе takеn proactivе mеasurеs by conducting invеstigations into thеir stocks to uncovеr instancеs of abusivе nakеd short sеlling. A majority of thеsе invеstigations rеvеalеd imbalancеs in sharе quantitiеs, highlighting thе sеvеrity of thе issue. Notably, in Junе 2023, thе SEC acknowlеdgеd thе pеrsistеncе of nakеd short sеlling as еvidеncеd by <span style="color: rgb(35, 111, 161);"><a href="https://www.sec.gov/news/press-release/2023-107" title="SEC Charges Investment Adviser and Principal in Abusive Naked Short Selling Scheme" target="_blank" rel="noopener" style="color: rgb(35, 111, 161);">charging</a></span> an Invеstmеnt Advisеr for orchеstrating an "Abusivе Nakеd Short Sеlling Schеmе." </p>
<blockquote>
<p><span>“The Securities and Exchange Commission today charged investment adviser Sabby Management LLC and its managing partner, Hal D. Mintz, with fraud in connection with a long running scheme involving misrepresentations and violations of rules for short selling and order making, as well as other violative trading, that generated more than $2 million in illegal profits.</span>”</p>
</blockquote>
<p dir="ltr"><span>Elon Musk references a short-selling investigation with CNBC, stating, “This is something the SEC should have done, but, curiously, did not.”. Many retail investors have been suggesting that naked shorting is occurring in their investments. AMC</span><span> dramatically dropped from $70+ to under $1 (pre-split), MMTLP abruptly halted days prior to the company's record date, and a large number of companies proved a share imbalance in their stock.</span></p>
<p dir="ltr"><span>South Korea officially banned short selling in November 2023 through June 2024 after regulators found “routine” abuse of naked short selling from foreign and institutional investors. In October of 2023, South Korea fined two Hong Kong banks for naked short-selling “The two unnamed investment banks made naked short-selling transactions of a total of 40 billion won ($29.58 million) and 16 billion won”, the Financial Supervisory Service (FSS) said in a statement.</span></p>
<p>This directive springs forth in the context of an ongoing scrutiny entailing HSBC and BNP Paribas. Allegations loom over their involvement in short selling stocks valued at a staggering 50 billion won ($37 million) during the timeline spanning 2021 to 2022.</p>
<p>The regulatory radar in South Korea flagged potential occurrences of naked short selling subsequent to uncovering such practices perpetrated by global banking entities.</p>
<p>Vocal opposition emanates from South Korean retail investors, denouncing short selling as it allegedly bestows undue advantages upon foreign and institutional investors.</p>
<p dir="ltr"><span>The petition states: "Naked short selling is still occurring. We demand a temporary halt of ALL short selling until there is a resolution. We suggest all readers sign this petition and share it with as many people as possible."</span></p>
<!-- Button to sign the petition -->
<p><a href="https://www.change.org/p/implement-a-temporary-ban-on-short-selling-in-the-united-states-stock-market?recruiter=1322107595&amp;recruited_by_id=b22d0c70-864b-11ee-942a-79ec2980de12&amp;utm_source=share_petition&amp;utm_campaign=share_petition&amp;utm_term=petition_dashboard&amp;utm_medium=copylink&amp;utm_content=cl_sharecopy_37749242_en-US%3A8" target="_blank" rel="noopener"> <button style="padding: 10px 20px; background-color: #ffffff; color: #3498db; border: 1px solid #3498db; cursor: pointer; border-radius: 5px; font-weight: bold;"> SIGN THE PETITION</button></a></p>]]> </content:encoded>
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