Here’s one from today
Shares outstanding 25M, Volume 110M
Here’s one from today
Shares outstanding 25M, Volume 110M
Curious to know if the same thought process applies to GME with it’s 1.3mil volume?
My only thought process here is that if someone bought a share someone else sold it, not sure how that turned into an argument
Thanks for showing me that. However not really comparable numbers to the size of the free float of AMC.
I do look forward to the outcome of how the meme stocks play out. I’m sure a lot of us have all made money out of them but more than anything it’s certainly opened my eyes on how the stock market works in the US
No argument here, unless you’re staring one lol
We have GME and AMC trading high and with very similar graphs. Just trying to have a discussion on the differences (i.e. volume) to try to ascertain what might be going on. I know most of you don’t think anything is amiss with the situation but some of us do. Healthy discussion is all and I get crickets in the GME thread lol.
I’m well up for a scrap though, bloody boring weekends ha
I’ve no arguments either!
Just studied this for a long time and feel the whole issue has brought up so many questions that are trying to be redressed by the powers that be.
Haven’t ETFs created a lot of this mess in the first place? I invest in different ways but have been intrigued by this whole situation and how the ‘big boys’ are trying to shift FTDs and short positions. This whole thing appears to be far more complex than first imagined
How are Disney+ and netflix subscriptions doing? Come back to be with that answer before talking about the cinema being a diminishing industry.
Aren’t those 2020 figures?
Yes but it was stagnant for 3 years before and getting huge debts so not a good sign pre covid.
@HarryGeezer not really a comparison you are asking for but netfix is still gaining but at a smaller rate The problem is as i mentioned above that cinemas have been getting huge debts for a while now and that streaming market share stops them being viable unless they change.
@dave was 100% correct in that they are NOT “innovative” as they have not reacted pre-covid and now are stuck as they can’t raise money when that could save them.
I challenge you Harry to come up with a single reason that the cinema industry can be anything other than a struggling industry without some change no-one has thought of.
None of the above affects the potential squeeze etc though.
That’s a complete strawman argument, Cinema audiences are shrinking, doesn’t matter whether it’s due to Netflix or not.
My only idea on this so far is that they may be able to use their spaces for E-Sports/VR gaming in some capacity. They will have to do something as you say. Thoughts?
This and maybe live sports? There will always be a market but it will be an uphill struggle to make profitable as people won’t go as often. I think the answer is definitely diversifying the space in a better way than expensive sweets somehow.
I also sold half my AMC for a few more GME yesterday
I’m thinking more towards amateur tourneys. I’d definitely go weekly to a Mariokart 64 or SFII tournament. Either to play or watch mates
They’ve already screened the MMA McGregor fight in the USA charging a third of the price of what it would have cost at home. Suspect they will try this everywhere with major sporting events.
They’ve broke a few box office records with recent films and showings.
I always bought believing it was never a $5 stock when you compare it to Cinemark and the rest which is why I bought. Now invested in it, it’s opened my eyes a lot to how the rest of the market and media works.
Having said all of this, I don’t think any of this is about the fundamentals and waiting to see what new filing NSCC 021 brings, if anything.
What ever it says on the charts
It’s the trend that matters and nothing to indicate they will have an amazing 2021 or 2022 how ever you spin it.