AMC is officially accepting bitcoin and ether in online payments with dogecoin coming next, CEO says

People walk outside the AMC Empire 25 movie theater in Times Square
AMC theater.

  • AMC is officially accepting select digital assets for online payments, according to CEO Adam Aron.
  • “We proudly now accept: drumroll, please… bitcoin, ether, bitcoin cash, and litecoin,” he said in a tweet. “Dogecoin next.”
  • Aron said in September that he intended to have the new feature in place by year-end.

AMC Entertainment, the movie theater chain beloved by many cryptocurrency enthusiasts, is officially accepting select digital assets for online payments, CEO Adam Aron revealed in a tweet late Thursday.

“Big newsflash! As promised, many new ways NOW to pay online at AMC. We proudly now accept: drumroll, please… bitcoin, ether, bitcoin cash, and litecoin,” he said.

Apple Pay, Google Pay, PayPal are also now accepted, he added, with “Dogecoin next.”

The unveiling of the new mode of payment came after Aron teased the possibility multiple times in the past. He said in September that he intended to have it in place by year-end.

And while dogecoin is still in the works as a means for online payment, AMC began accepting it last month for gift card purchases of up to $200 a day using a BitPay Wallet.

The inclusion of dogecoin can be attributed to a recent Twitter poll Aron launched, asking for input on whether AMC should consider accepting it. The survey garnered 140,000 votes, of which 68.1% said yes.

And earlier in November during AMC’s earnings call, AMC said it is looking at adding shiba inu to the list after strong demand from the SHIBarmy. Shiba inu is a new meme token that has had a stunning rally since the start of the year. Again, a Twitter poll was launched, and after 153,100 votes, 81% backed the idea.

AMC, once a struggling company that has flirted with bankruptcy in the past, skyrocketed to fame earlier this year amid the meme stock frenzy. Alongside GameStop, the two firms saw their share prices rise amid overwhelming demand from retail investors despite their questionable valuations.

Aron thus far has embraced his company’s newfound fame by playing into AMC’s status as an iconic meme stock. He has, for instance, reached out to retail investors through tweets and YouTube videos, and has even offered ordinary investors movie perks such as free popcorn.

In late October, Aron also floated the possibility that his movie theater chain could issue its own crypto, though he did not elaborate further.

AMC shares have surged 1,600% so far this year.

Read the original article on Business Insider

AMC is now accepting dogecoin for gift cards after crypto fans flooded a Twitter poll from CEO Adam Aron

A person rides his bicycle past the closed AMC movie theaters in Times Square on October 22, 2020.
AMC theater.

  • AMC is now accepting dogecoin as a payment option for gift card purchases using a BitPay Wallet.
  • The move came after its CEO in September launched a Twitter poll asking whether AMC should accept the meme token.
  • CEO Adam Aron added that his company will continue to work on online crypto payment transactions.
  • Sign up here for our daily newsletter, 10 Things Before the Opening Bell.

Adam Aron, the CEO of AMC Theater, cemented his commitment to dogecoin fans.

The social media-savvy CEO on Tuesday announced that his movie-theater chain is accepting the meme token as a payment option for gift card purchases of up to $200 a day using a BitPay Wallet, he said in a tweet.

Aron added that his company will continue to work on online crypto payment transactions, in step with his September announcement that AMC will be accepting bitcoin, ether, bitcoin cash, and litecoin by the end of the year.

In September, Aron launched a Twitter poll asking for input on whether AMC should consider accepting dogecoin. By the time the survey closed, it attracted 140,000 votes within 24 hours, with 68.1% voting for the cinema chain to accept the token at all locations.

On Wednesday, AMC stock was trading 3.35% lower at $35.81. Shares are still about 16 times what they were worth at the beginning of the year. Last week, the company announced it repurchased $41.3 million of debt securities to lower its interest expense, sending the stock to a two-day rally.

AMC, once a struggling company that has flirted with bankruptcy in the past, skyrocketed to fame earlier this year amid the meme stock frenzy. Alongside GameStop, the two firms saw their share price rise amid overwhelming demand from retail investors despite their questionable valuations.

Aron thus far has made good of his company’s newfound fame by playing into AMC’s status as a meme stock. He has, for instance, reached out to retail investors through tweets and YouTube videos, and has even offered ordinary investors movie perks such as free popcorn.

Read the original article on Business Insider

Leverage ‘can rip your arms off,’ former TD Ameritrade boss says in warning to meme-stock retail traders

Joe Moglia
Joe Moglia, former CEO of TD Ameritrade and current chair of FG New America Acquisition.

  • “Leverage on the way up is a great thing. Leverage on the way down can rip your arms off,” former TD Ameritrade CEO Joe Moglia tells retail traders in meme-stocks in a CNBC interview.
  • Brokerage firms and financial houses dealing with retail investors must be better at educating their clients about the risks of leverage or using loans from brokers to buy stocks.
  • Moglia on Thursday addressed retail investors as AMC shares have rallied sharply in the last two weeks.
  • See more stories on Insider’s business page.

Using leverage, or borrowing money to buy stocks, can pay off for retail investors participating in the explosive rallies in AMC Entertainment, GameStop and other so-called meme stocks but they need to be aware that those trades can quickly turn and burn them financially, the ex-head of TD Ameritrade said in a CNBC interview on Thursday.

“My biggest concern is what’s going on with the individual investor … and that they’ve got to be able to understand when they use leverage what that really means,” Joe Moglia, a former CEO and chairman of the online discount brokerage, told CNBC’s “Squawk Box”.

In using leverage, or margin trading, investors borrow cash from their brokerage companies to buy stocks and pledge securities in their accounts as collateral. Margin trading increases buying power and expands profits.

“Leverage on the way up is a great thing. Leverage on the way down can rip your arms off,” Moglia said, referring to losses that can hit investors when a stock price falls. He said investing platforms and other market professionals need to improve upon educating individual investors who day trade about the risks they face from market declines and how to handle them.

“A quick example: if you bought AMC at $10, and it goes to $20, is that not enough of a profit? It goes to $30, it goes to $40. At what time do you start to trim that position or, in effect, get rid of the position altogether? There are things that we’ve got to do a better job of with day traders,” said Moglia, who is the current chair of FG New America, a blank-check company, or SPAC, that targets opportunities in the fintech industry.

Moglia spoke as retail investors have launched AMC’s price up by more than 500% since late May in defending the movie-theater chain’s shares against hedge funds selling the stock short. The rally is reminiscent of the January boom in GameStop’s price as retail investors battled hedge funds betting against the video-game retailer’s stock. GameStop shares eventually retreated sharply from an all-time high of $483 apiece.

Investors can be vulnerable when the value of the stocks they’ve purchased drops significantly. Those declines can trigger margin calls, or demands by brokers for clients to repay some of the money they borrowed. Brokers can liquidate a client’s assets to cover the debt if they fail to meet a margin call.

Retail investors have lately overpowered short-sellers betting against AMC. Short-sellers lost nearly $3 billion on Wednesday alone as AMC’s share price more than doubled, according to data from analytics firm Ortex.

“What we’ve got to be conscious of is, at some point, the market is going to turn around. The technicals are going to wear out and [retail investors have] got to be prepared for a down move in that. But so far, I think they’ve pry made a little bit of money,” Moglia said.

Investors this year are borrowing all-time high amounts against their portfolios, with margin debt reaching $847 billion at the end of April, according to data from brokerage industry regulator FINRA.

Retail trading volumes, meanwhile, have been climbing on the back of growth in commission-free brokerage accounts and user-friendly trading apps and as millions of Americans forced to stay home because of COVID-19 turned to the stock market to make money.

Moglia said retail day traders overall should learn more about long-term investing strategies which can enhance discipline.

“If they love what they’re doing and they get burned a bit, that shouldn’t send them away from the market although I recognize that’s a risk. That should tell them they need a better education, a better understanding that day-trading alone is not going to be good enough to ride out the ups and downs of what’s going on with the economy and the markets over the next several years.”

Read the original article on Business Insider