Analysis-With popcorn and tweets, AMC's Aron rides retail investor wave
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[June 03, 2021] By
David Randall and Sinéad Carew
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Free popcorn for
shareholders. Following more than 500 die-hard fans of his company's
stock on Twitter. Retweeting a video of what appears to be an airplane
flying a banner with the meme-stock rallying cry "AMC to the Moon"
around Manhattan.
Welcome to the world of AMC Entertainment Holdings Inc Chief Executive
Adam Aron, who since the beginning of the year has taken to new heights
the role of chief promoter of a company that was on the brink of
bankruptcy.
At a time when many on Wall Street argue that the movie theater operator
is over-valued and in dire need of an accelerated economic recovery from
the coronavirus pandemic to justify its share price, Aron, 66, is
leaning in to the growing power of individual investors to keep
so-called meme stocks surging.
"Watch out naysayers, AMC is going to play on offense again. Here we
come!" Aron wrote in a June 1 tweet
https://twitter.com/CEOAdam/
status/1399683077660721152.
He has been riding a wave of enthusiasm for the stock. AMC shares are up
nearly 3,000% since the start of the year and almost doubled on
Wednesday to close at $62.55 a share, way above the average target price
of $5.11 among Wall Street analysts, according to Refinitiv data. AMC is
now valued at $28.2 billion, based on Wednesday's closing price.
Aron, who became CEO in 2016 after running the National Basketball
Association's Philadelphia 76ers, started promoting AMC after its shares
were swept up in a retail buying frenzy in January.
AMC did not respond to a request for comment, and Aron did not reply to
a direct message on Twitter.
Aron is part of a growing number of executives on Wall Street such as
Tesla Inc's Elon Musk and the incoming chairman of GameStop Corp, Ryan
Cohen, who appear to be doing more to court retail rather than
institutional investors.
"These individual investors likely own a majority of our shares," Aron
said during the company's May earnings call. "They own AMC. We work for
them. I work for them."
Some analysts are skeptical that such showmanship will bolster AMC's
share price long-term. There are no actively managed stock funds among
the company's 20 largest shareholders, according to Refinitiv data,
leaving open the risk that a shift in retail investor opinion could
quickly sink its shares.
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2019 American Cinematheque Award - Arrivals - Beverly Hills,
California, U.S., November 8, 2019 - Adam Aron. REUTERS/Mario
Anzuoni
"The Twitter horde love him. He's playing to the crowd and it's working," said
MKM Partners analyst Eric Handler, who questioned AMC'S stated strategy of
issuing new shares to raise capital. "He'd be better off improving the balance
sheet and providing some stability for the business," he said.
Michael Pachter, an analyst at Wedbush Securities, said that selling enough
movie tickets and popcorn to justify a $40 share price for the company - where
it was trading early on Wednesday - would require that revenues nearly double
from his 2022 estimates of $322,000 per screen from movie tickets and $6 per
person in spending on food and drinks.
"It's hard to understand why AMC would perform at double its historical
average," he said.
Aron, whose career includes a decade as chief executive of Vail Resorts Inc and
a stint leading Starwood Hotels and Resorts Worldwide Inc, focused more of his
attention on connecting with consumers rather than retail shareholders in his
previous executive roles.
At the 76ers, for instance, he was part of a charge to cut ticket prices, while
at Vail Resorts he was instrumental in expanding the company into a nationwide
business. Shares of the company fell nearly 4% when he announced his resignation
in 2006.
Promoting a company's shares to retail investors may be the new reality for many
companies, said Jim Paulsen, chief investment officer at the Leuthold Group.
"CEOs have always been showmen and a big part of what they do is put on shows
for institutional investors," said Paulsen. "You may have a Reddit group that is
the focus of the tweet but the reality is institutional guys like me are going
to hear about it just as quickly."
(Additional reporting by Krystal Hu; editing by Megan Davies and Leslie Adler)
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