GameStop Just Printed Its Best Quarter Ever. The Bigger Story Is What Comes Next.

GameStop (NYSE: GME) reported Q1 2026 results after the close on June 2 — and they were, by the company’s own admission, the best in its history. Net income of $389.6 million. Operating income of $143.3 million. Both all-time records for any first quarter the company has ever reported. The stock popped roughly 7% in after-hours trading.

Here’s the thing: the earnings almost feel secondary to everything else happening at this company right now.

The Numbers

  • Net Sales: $835.3M (+14% YoY, vs. $766.6M est.)
  • EPS: $0.30 adjusted (vs. $0.16 est. — an 87.5% beat)
  • Net Income: $389.6M (highest quarterly net income in company history)
  • Operating Income: $143.3M (highest Q1 operating income in company history, vs. a $10.8M operating loss in the prior year Q1)
  • Liquidity: $9.7B in cash, marketable securities, digital assets, and related receivables

Revenue growth was driven by collectibles — and that’s not a throwaway line. GameStop now generates more revenue from collectibles than from hardware. The pivot away from legacy console and disc sales, which had been bleeding the company for years, is actually working. Trading cards and pop culture collectibles are holding the top line while the core gaming retail model continues its structural decline.

The Buyback Signal

The board approved a new $2 billion share repurchase authorization through June 2, 2029 — replacing an authorization that dated back to March 2019. That’s a meaningful signal. A company sitting on $9.7 billion in liquidity authorizing a $2 billion buyback is essentially telling the market it believes the stock is undervalued. Ryan Cohen doesn’t move quietly.

The eBay Situation

Back in May, GameStop submitted a non-binding $55.5 billion unsolicited offer to acquire eBay at $125 per share — roughly a 20% premium to eBay’s price at announcement and approximately 46% above eBay’s valuation from early February, when GameStop began quietly accumulating a position. The company has disclosed a 7.5%+ economic stake through shares and derivatives and is asking shareholders to approve a significant equity issuance to help finance the deal.

Cohen has indicated willingness to bypass eBay’s board and go directly to shareholders through a proxy contest if management refuses to negotiate. He’s also left the door open to selling GameStop’s Bitcoin treasury — approximately $368 million worth — to help fund the transaction, though he’s framed the eBay deal as a higher capital priority than holding BTC.

Whether the eBay deal happens or not is a separate question. What it tells you is that this is no longer a meme-stock-nostalgia trade. The balance sheet is real. The profitability is real. The ambition is clearly real.

Bull / Base / Bear

Bull: eBay deal progresses or at minimum forces a strategic conversation. Collectibles revenue continues compounding. The $9.7B liquidity fortress earns meaningful interest income while management deploys capital selectively. GME re-rates as a holding company, not a retailer.

Base: eBay bid goes nowhere. Collectibles carry the top line. Buyback supports the stock. GME trades on its cash-per-share value and operating income improvement — not on deal speculation.

Bear: Heavy equity issuance to fund the eBay deal dilutes existing shareholders sharply. Legacy gaming revenue deteriorates faster than collectibles can offset. The Bitcoin position creates mark-to-market noise. The stock reverts to being driven by retail sentiment rather than fundamentals.

The part people skip: GameStop’s transformation from meme stock to something resembling an actual operating business happened quietly, while most institutional investors weren’t watching. The Q1 numbers are hard to dismiss. Whether the eBay moonshot changes the calculus entirely — that’s the live question heading into summer.

For informational purposes only.

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