Why GameStop is destined to become another Blockbuster video

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Wednesday, January 27, 2021

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GameStop’s stock is on fire, but that has nothing to do with reality

GameStop (GME). Who would have thought the most talked about stock on Wall Street in early 2021 would be a past-its-prime mall retailer? And yet here we are. The company’s stock has gained an incredible 8,949% in the last 12 months at market close Wednesday, with much of that coming in just the last two weeks.

By now the reasons behind GameStop’s massive gains are well documented. The stock has been a major target for short sellers due to the continued shift to digital game sales. But earlier this month, the stock shot up after activist investor and Chewy founder Ryan Cohen joined the video game retailer’s board along with two allies who had previously worked with him.

Traders on Reddit’s WallStreetBets board, seeing so many short positions in GameStop, then dove headlong into a massive short squeeze, forcing the stock’s price even higher and crushing short sellers as they moved to buy up stock to cover their losses. Traders from the board have also been squeezing short positions in stocks like AMC (AMC), Bed Bath & Beyond (BBBY), and BlackBerry (BB). But GameStop has been the most high-profile target.

One of my best friends put about $24,000 into the stock after reading WallStreetBets and was up as much as $113,000 as of Wednesday afternoon — though he wasn’t going to convince me to get in on the action.

A man poses outside a GameStop store with his purchase of a Sony PS5 gaming console in the Manhattan borough of New York City, New York, U.S., November 12, 2020. REUTERS/Carlo Allegri
A man poses outside a GameStop store with his purchase of a Sony PS5 gaming console in the Manhattan borough of New York City, New York, U.S., November 12, 2020. REUTERS/Carlo Allegri

The stock’s performance is so far divorced from the reality of its retail operations it’s practically operating in a parallel universe. In its most recent quarter, GameStop’s total sales were down more than 30% compared to the same time last year. Gamers, meanwhile, continue to transition away from buying physical copies of games in favor of digital downloads. And the launch of cloud gaming services spells disaster for traditional game retailers.

“GameStop’s problem is not that they don’t do a good job selling video games online — I guess they could do a slightly better job, everyone can — it’s the fact that more and more gamers, they are not buying physical games, they are just downloading them,” Loop Capital Markets’ Anthony Chukumba told Yahoo Finance Live.

“GameStop can have a better website than Amazon, and that’s not going to change that,” he added.

To be sure, some on Wall Street paint a rosier picture for GameStop, noting it has a turn-around plan that focuses on interactive experiences and e-commerce. If that plan doesn’t work, though, the retailer will likely end up as just another Blockbuster — a shell of its former self, with one surviving store in the entire world, if it’s lucky.