AMC surges on record May attendance despite $150M dilution, heavy debt load
I have been watching meme stocks long enough to recognize the pattern. The momentum arrives before the fundamentals justify it.
The warning signs are visible to anyone who looks. And the traders driving the move either don't care or have a different time horizon entirely. In my view, AMC Entertainment (AMC) is at that point.
The stock has surged 107.81% over the last month and is up 70.51% year to date, closing June 17 at $2.66, according to Yahoo Finance. And this is happening despite the 106-year-old AMC completing a $150 million equity offering on June 11, according to an AMC press release.
The equity offering involves selling approximately 105.3 million new shares into the open market, directly diluting existing shareholders. In most situations, that kind of share issuance would pressure a stock. Here, the rally barely paused.
The question worth asking is whether this time there is more substance behind the surge. Or whether the meme playbook is simply running the table again.
Also Read: AMC Entertainment Holdings, Inc. (AMC) Latest News and Stories
The real story: AMC's operating business is genuinely improving
I want to be honest about something the bears sometimes skip. The underlying AMC business in 2026 is materially better than it was two years ago.
The company welcomed 25.5 million guests in May 2026. In fact, that was its highest-attended month of May since 2019, according to AMC's press release. Six films opened to more than $75 million domestically in the past ten weeks: The Mandalorian and Grogu, The Devil Wears Prada 2, Michael, The Super Mario Galaxy Movie, Project Hail Mary, and Backrooms at $81 million.
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The North American box office surged 22% in the first quarter of 2026 compared to the prior year, according to the Q1 fiscal 2026 CEO Adam Aron's commentary.
The Q1 fiscal 2026 financials, reported May 5, back that narrative up. Total revenues reached $1.045 billion, up from $862.5 million. Adjusted EBITDA swung to positive $38.3 million from negative $57.7 million, a $96 million improvement year over year. Net loss narrowed to $117.1 million from $202.1 million.
The box office is back, and in a big and powerful way.
These words came from Adam Aron in the Q1 fiscal 2026 earnings release. That is actually not spin because the numbers support it.
What the bulls are running past. Dilution, debt, and cash burn
Here is where my read diverges from the momentum trade.
AMC's cash position as of March 31 was $339.2 million, before the $150 million in ATM proceeds. The capital raise strengthens near-term liquidity. But net cash used in operating activities was still negative $128.5 million in Q1, according to Q1 fiscal 2026 financials.
The business is improving, but it is not yet generating cash. The long-term debt accumulated during the pandemic survival years remains a structural weight on the balance sheet.
The ATM offering itself is a pattern AMC shareholders know well. This company has diluted its way through multiple capital raises over the past several years. Each one helps the balance sheet. Each one reduces the value of every existing share.
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Aron acknowledged the tradeoff, framing the raise as a tool to "reduce financial leverage" over time. But the short-term math for stockholders is this. 105.3 million new shares means your stake is worth less than it was before.
My review of the short interest picture is another thing to consider. Short sellers remain heavily positioned in AMC, which historically has been the fuel that turns retail buying interest into vertical price moves.
When enough retail volume hits a heavily shorted stock, the forced covering creates a feedback loop that can disconnect price from fundamentals entirely. That appears to be at least part of what the last month's 107% move reflects.
The film slate ahead and what it means for the rest of 2026
The one area where the bulls have a legitimate forward-looking argument is the release calendar.
Scary Movie and Masters of the Universe opened on June 5. Supergirl hits on June 26. Minions and Monsters opens July 1, according to AMC Entertainment.
If Hollywood sustains this cadence - and based on what I have seen in Q1 and May, it appears to be doing exactly that - AMC's second-half revenue trajectory could approach post-pandemic records.
The operating leverage Aron described is real. A largely fixed cost base means incremental revenue flows disproportionately into EBITDA. A strong full-year 2026 could meaningfully compress the debt-reduction timeline and change the medium-term balance-sheet story.
But AMC at $2.66 is still down 94.34% over three years and 99.56% over five years, according to Yahoo Finance.
The business is recovering. The debt is real. The dilution happened. And traders are once again moving the stock faster than any of those facts can keep up with, which is precisely what makes AMC one of the most fascinating and most dangerous stocks in the market right now.
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This story was originally published June 18, 2026 at 12:13 PM.