| You're conflating two things here. Yes, in 2021 GameStop did sell shares to raise cash in a dilutive way. [1] No, that is not being treated as profit or revenue. Gamestop had ~418 million in profit in 2025. [2] A fraction of that profit does come from interest income. Ignoring that (say to value the business separate from the cash) they still made ~110 million in profit. In my personal opinion (not financial advice) Gamestop with the cash it has today is a much more attractive investment than without. If you have worries about an economic downturn, it's a hedge. If you worry about GameStop being able to maintain it's current revenue/profit or volatility, it's runway. There's a variety of ways it reduces the risk of an investment. [1] https://investor.gamestop.com/news-releases/news-details/202... [2] https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1326380/000132638026... page 27 has the consolidated results. |
More than half of it came from interest income.
Gamestop has been unable to grow revenue since Cohen took over, failed initiative after failed initiative. The only thing saving them is their meme stock nature and a legion of people willing to throw good money after bad allowing them to dilute shareholders to build a warchest.
They have increased profit by closing something like 50% of their stores but you can't grow a retail company by constantly closing stores at some point you have to find a way to make the stores more profitable and in 5 years with tons of different attempts they've not found that. Revenue is down almost 50% in the past 3 years.
Having a pile of cash doesn't matter if you have a leader who has no good ideas for how to invest it to improve returns for shareholders, all it does is allow you to die for longer.