Archive for the tag: Don&#39t

Don't Lose Money Investing As A Beginner

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How can you make money investing in the stock market? Here is a breakdown on some steps you can take to not lose money in the stock market!

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Why Box Office Results Don't Explain How Movies Make Money

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In this video weā€™re going to look at how movies make money, and why box office numbers are misleadingā€¦.

There was a time not all that many years ago when the public didnā€™t generally know how much money a movie earned at the box office on its opening weekend. That made it possible for a film to start slowly and, if it had good word of mouth, become a hit over time.

Now, box office totals are widely reported.

But itā€™s important to remember that box office totals reflect how much people have paid theaters for tickets for a movie. And a film becomes profitable after the movie company has recouped all the money it spent not only making the movie but marketing it.

So, letā€™s take a hypothetical superhero movie based on lesser-known DC character Marvelous Man. Due to the success of Aquaman, Marvelous Man: The Movie gets a green light and a budget of 0 million — a relatively small amount for superhero film. And letā€™s further assume the movie actually comes in exactly on budget. At this point the studio is 0 million in the red.

It then has to let the public know the movie is coming. It does this by advertising, promotional tie-ins (like a Marvelous Man Happy Meal toy), and media junkets with the filmā€™s stars. That all costs money too and that has to be recouped as well before the movie can be considered profitable.

Letā€™s pretend that another million was spent on marketing Marvelous Man: The Movie ā€“ thereā€™s no hard and fast rule for marketing budgets, but half of production budget isnā€™t uncommon.

Now that movie has been made and promoted, itā€™s time for opening weekend. Say Marvelous Man: The Movie sells 0 million in tickets on opening weekend. Itā€™s a big number, but itā€™s very important to remember that the studio does not receive all of that money — the theaters get a cut.

How much is that cut? It varies. For a huge film like a new Star Wars or Avengers movie, Disney has leverage. It can negotiate a bigger cut and demand the theater show the film on multiple screens. It can also ask for a higher percentage of the gross in succeeding weeks.

In general, the studioā€™s percentage gets lower the longer a film has been in theaters. Thatā€™s done to entice theaters to keep films playing longer.

So, in the first week of a film thatā€™s not a sure thing, the company producing the film might get 60% of the box office. That means that on the shocking 0 million in tickets sold by Marvelous Man: The Movie at the domestic box office, the company that made the film gets paid millionā€¦ meaning itā€™s still million in the red.

Foreign box office is even more complicated but itā€™s all based on the theaters getting a cut and the movie producers getting a cut. The math varies, but in a very broad sense movies havenā€™t made any money until their box office roughly equals twice the money spent on production.

Of course, a movie isnā€™t done once it leaves theaters. Money is paid for streaming rights — a number that can be challenging to actually apply to any one movie since deals tend to be studio-based for multiple films. Thereā€™s also DVD sales, rentals, an eventual pay cable window, then maybe a free cable or broadcast deal. And donā€™t forget about licensing opportunities with merchandise.

But in general, the bulk of a filmā€™s revenue comes from its theatrical run.

Letā€™s take a look at a real example to break down how fixating on just the gross box office figure warps the picture of a movieā€™s profitability.

Much-maligned film Solo: A Star Wars Story made 2 million globally at the box ā€“ but the studio only got a cut of that total.

It had a reported production budget of 5 million and had a big marketing campaign behind it. We donā€™t know the exact number, but itā€™s safe to assume promotion cost 0 million, maybe even 0 million.

So itā€™s entirely possible that Solo lost a decent chunk of money, even on the nearly 0 million it posted in ticket sales.

Unfortunately running the numbers on the movie industry involves a lot of guesswork because the cuts on ticket sales arenā€™t always reported and marketing spend often isnā€™t made public.

The bottom line, however, is that most movies make the bulk of their money from the revenue split with theaters and thereā€™s no clear way for the public to know exactly how much money any given film makes or loses.

Now next time you see a big box office number, youā€™ll know thereā€™s more to the story!

Thanks for watching this video ā€“ which movies do you think were the biggest box office flops? Sound off in the comments section.

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