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MoviePass stock drops to 17 cents. Heres why the companys CEO isnt worried
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MoviePass parent company Helios and Matheson watched its stock drop 99 percent to 17 cents per share. - photo by Herb Scribner
MoviePass doesnt want you to worry. Everything will be fine.

MoviePass parent company Helios and Matheson watched its stock drop 99 percent to 17 cents per share Friday, down from $39 back in October, when the company started offering a movie ticket per day for $10 per month.

MoviePass CEO Mitch Lowe told CNNMoney theres no reason to worry about the stock drop. The company, he said, is in good hands.

We've already announced that we are looking at different options of doing a reverse (stock split) and all these different things to recapitalize, restructure the company, he said. But there's no shortage of institutions willing to work with us to give us money, even as we're going through this right now, losing money. The institutions definitely understand the model. They understand where we're going. And I think that we've gotten there in record time.

Lowe said the company plans to break even by the end of the year, which is when it hopes to reach 5 million subscribers.

He said something similar in an interview with BuzzFeed News this week, explaining the company will likely break even by the end of 2018.

If not, itll likely lose only $1 per customer, he said.

Lowe told CNNMoney the company isnt worried about other movie theater chains joining the subscription service game, either. He said MoviePass subscription numbers jumped 23 percent after AMC joined the game.

As the Deseret News reported, AMC (arguably MoviePass' biggest critic) announced last month it would add a new subscription service for about $12 per month.

Cinemark already has its subscription service that offers more deals and discounts. Meanwhile, Sinemia is a MoviePass competitor that continues to add features that remain unseen in MoviePass.

Read the entire interview with Lowe at CNNMoney.