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Subscribers to the MoviePass $9.95-a-month all-you-can-watch service who wondered how the company can make money got an answer on Thursday.

It can’t. At least not yet.

The parent company of the popular movie subscription plan was forced to sell $150 million in new stock — with much of the cash heading straight to MoviePass, which is burning through $20 million a month.

The stock sale by Helios and Matheson Analytics left investors screaming — as though they just sat through the thriller “A Quiet Place.”

Shares of Helios tumbled 33 percent on the news, to $2.55.

It didn’t help that $30 million of the offering sold at $2.75, a significant discount from Wednesday’s closing price of $3.83.

Angry Helios shareholders took to Twitter to voice their displeasure with the company, which has seen its stock price drop 88 percent from its high of $32.90 on Oct. 11.

“Great way to reward us shareholders, by diluting the stock yet again,” one infuriated individual wrote. “A blind gerbil could do more for the company.”

Another investor invited regulators to investigate company brass.

Under the MoviePass business model, subscribers can see a movie a day for a single monthly fee — and the company pays the theater full price for each ticket.

Helios recorded a $150.8 million loss in 2017, largely from MoviePass, it said in its annual report released this week.

MoviePass lowered its price and started to attract a massive number of new customers last August.

Helios Chief Executive Ted Farnsworth isn’t concerned about the cash burn rate, telling Variety recently that he is “sitting on hundreds of millions of dollars of dry powder.”

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