Casino Capitalism Comes to Hollywood

Roger Friedman reports:

Soon, everyone —I mean, everyone — will be able to bet on the boxoffice, and make or lose lots of money on the outcome.

Cantor Fitzgerald’s Howard Lutnick is right now beta testing something called The Cantor Exchange. You can find it here. Lutnick already operates the Hollywood Stock Exchange, where players trade “virtual” shares of everything including stars, directors, films, etc. It’s all innocent fun. CX, as it will be known, is a different story. Cantor is awaiting regulatory approval before it launches officially. When it does, the boxoffice could become an interesting, maybe even dangerous, game. It’s real money, and it sure looks like anyone can play, even studio execs and theater distributors....

The trading on this market will go on 24-7, meaning as a weekend progresses, a film’s values will go up and down along with investors. For a surprise hit like “The Blind Side,” this could be a bonanza. More importantly, speculating on films’ futures will begin six months before their release dates. If CX were live now, believe me, the betting on James Cameron’s looming, maybe $500 million, gamble on “Avatar” would be the main focus of the site. And that should prove controversial, because there will inevitably be reports on what a film’s perceived business will be even as it’s being prepared and marketed.

The effect of all this could be harrowing, to say the least, especially for a studio’s finances. PR wars could become intense in a whole new way to spin advance word one way or another. Stay tuned…

This may be the worst idea to hit American film since George Lucas set his heart on putting aliens in his next Indiana Jones movie.

COMMENTS (1)

12/02/2009 - 2:54pm EDT |

Can you write a blog post about what you think the dangers here are? I mean, the major studios are publicly traded companies, so that kind of gambling already takes place surrounding big releases. What're you predicting the fallout will be from expanding this kind of trading?

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