Shares in a British camera and lighting firm that supplies major TV and film projects slumped due to the impact of the Hollywood writers’ and actors’ strikes.

Videndum, a London-based company founded in 1910, said it is experiencing ‘significantly more impact’ from the strikes in the second half of the year than it expected.

Its share price crashed 36.9pc following the financial update.

Writers went on strike in May and actors followed in July.

Videndum, which has worked on productions including Game Of Thrones (starring Emilia Clarke, pictured), said there has been ‘encouraging news about the strikes’ but it is not clear when productions will restart.

Shares in a British camera and lighting firm that supplies major TV and film projects slumped due to the impact of the Hollywood writers¿ and actors¿ strikes (stock photo)

Shares in a British camera and lighting firm that supplies major TV and film projects slumped due to the impact of the Hollywood writers¿ and actors¿ strikes (stock photo)

Shares in a British camera and lighting firm that supplies major TV and film projects slumped due to the impact of the Hollywood writers’ and actors’ strikes (stock photo)

Videndum, which has worked on productions including Game Of Thrones (starring Emilia Clarke, pictured), said there has been ¿encouraging news about the strikes¿

Videndum, which has worked on productions including Game Of Thrones (starring Emilia Clarke, pictured), said there has been ¿encouraging news about the strikes¿

Videndum, which has worked on productions including Game Of Thrones (starring Emilia Clarke, pictured), said there has been ‘encouraging news about the strikes’

Screenwriters and studios have reached a deal after nearly five months, although it is still subject to a vote by union members. The actors’ strike is ongoing.

The company, which also supplies news broadcasters and owns the Autocue brand, warned it might not be able to meet its debt repayments due to the financial impact of the industrial action.

Revenue fell 25pc to £165m in the first six months of the year and it swung to a loss of £50m having made a profit of £16.4m in the same period of 2022.

This post first appeared on Dailymail.co.uk

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Huge change for thousands of households struggling with debt as ‘significant’ fee set to be axed in days

THOUSANDS of households struggling with debt are set to benefit from a…

Alcohol free booze costs up to 20% MORE than the real deal, shock probe shows

ONE in six of us plans to go alcohol-free next month, but…

Ajay Banga vows to build better World Bank: But is he the wrong man for the job?

The World Bank has never been more important. The resilience of the…

House prices are still rising despite higher interest rates, Rics estate agents say

A lack of homes coming to the market is continuing to drive…