Marketdash

One Meme Stock Actually Has a Plan: GameStop vs. AMC After the Hype Died

MarketDash Editorial Team
5 hours ago
GameStop heads into Q3 earnings with a credible turnaround strategy under Ryan Cohen's disciplined leadership, while AMC continues struggling with fundamental challenges no amount of retail enthusiasm can solve.

Remember when meme stocks were going to break Wall Street? That feels like a lifetime ago. Now, as GameStop Corp. (GME) prepares to report third quarter earnings Tuesday after the bell, the gap between the two original meme twins has turned into a canyon. GameStop looks like it might actually have a plan. AMC Entertainment Holdings Inc. (AMC), meanwhile, keeps fighting problems that retail hype was never going to fix.

Two Companies, Two Completely Different Paths

Both companies started the meme era staring down bankruptcy. What happened next couldn't be more different. AMC went the financial engineering route—endless dilution, reverse splits, constant restructuring—just to keep the lights on. Shareholders are tired, and the stock shows it, down sharply over the past year.

GameStop chose the boring path. Under CEO Ryan Cohen, the company went hard on cost cuts, operational discipline and building a fortress balance sheet. No moonshots. No theatrics. Just the unglamorous work of trying to make the business functional again.

Cohen's style is deliberately low-key. "Actions speak louder than words," he told investors, making it clear he's focused on profitability and survival, not making promises he can't keep.

What the Charts Are Saying

The technical picture tells you everything about market sentiment right now. GameStop is trading around $23, sitting comfortably above its eight-day, 20-day and 50-day moving averages. The MACD (moving average convergence/divergence) is positive, and RSI (relative strength index) is hovering near 61, which suggests actual accumulation is happening. Real buyers, not just momentum chasers.

The big test? The 200-day simple moving average at $24.46. A clean break above that level could signal a genuine trend shift, especially if earnings show the turnaround is gaining traction rather than just riding another hype wave.

AMC's chart tells the opposite story. Trading near $2.27, the stock is underwater on all major moving averages. MACD is negative, RSI sits around 43, and the whole setup screams persistent distribution. Bearish sentiment isn't just present—it's entrenched.

Earnings: The Competence Test

Wall Street expects GameStop to post 20 cents in earnings per share on $987 million in revenue. Those aren't blow-out numbers, and nobody's expecting them to be. The real question isn't whether GameStop beats estimates—it's whether Cohen's quiet rebuild is showing signs of life.

Sentiment has been washed out for a while now, and technical support is starting to firm up. In that environment, even modest progress could move the needle. This isn't about delivering miracles. It's about demonstrating basic operational competence, quarter after quarter.

Why This Matters

GameStop isn't promising to reinvent retail or revolutionize gaming. It's trying to prove it can run a profitable business without lighting investor capital on fire. That might sound underwhelming compared to the rocket-ship narratives of 2021, but in the post-meme world, competence might actually be the scarcest commodity.

The meme era taught us that hype can push stocks to absurd levels temporarily. What happens next is teaching us something else: when the hype fades, fundamentals still matter. GameStop is betting that boring discipline beats exciting chaos. We're about to see if the market agrees.

One Meme Stock Actually Has a Plan: GameStop vs. AMC After the Hype Died

MarketDash Editorial Team
5 hours ago
GameStop heads into Q3 earnings with a credible turnaround strategy under Ryan Cohen's disciplined leadership, while AMC continues struggling with fundamental challenges no amount of retail enthusiasm can solve.

Remember when meme stocks were going to break Wall Street? That feels like a lifetime ago. Now, as GameStop Corp. (GME) prepares to report third quarter earnings Tuesday after the bell, the gap between the two original meme twins has turned into a canyon. GameStop looks like it might actually have a plan. AMC Entertainment Holdings Inc. (AMC), meanwhile, keeps fighting problems that retail hype was never going to fix.

Two Companies, Two Completely Different Paths

Both companies started the meme era staring down bankruptcy. What happened next couldn't be more different. AMC went the financial engineering route—endless dilution, reverse splits, constant restructuring—just to keep the lights on. Shareholders are tired, and the stock shows it, down sharply over the past year.

GameStop chose the boring path. Under CEO Ryan Cohen, the company went hard on cost cuts, operational discipline and building a fortress balance sheet. No moonshots. No theatrics. Just the unglamorous work of trying to make the business functional again.

Cohen's style is deliberately low-key. "Actions speak louder than words," he told investors, making it clear he's focused on profitability and survival, not making promises he can't keep.

What the Charts Are Saying

The technical picture tells you everything about market sentiment right now. GameStop is trading around $23, sitting comfortably above its eight-day, 20-day and 50-day moving averages. The MACD (moving average convergence/divergence) is positive, and RSI (relative strength index) is hovering near 61, which suggests actual accumulation is happening. Real buyers, not just momentum chasers.

The big test? The 200-day simple moving average at $24.46. A clean break above that level could signal a genuine trend shift, especially if earnings show the turnaround is gaining traction rather than just riding another hype wave.

AMC's chart tells the opposite story. Trading near $2.27, the stock is underwater on all major moving averages. MACD is negative, RSI sits around 43, and the whole setup screams persistent distribution. Bearish sentiment isn't just present—it's entrenched.

Earnings: The Competence Test

Wall Street expects GameStop to post 20 cents in earnings per share on $987 million in revenue. Those aren't blow-out numbers, and nobody's expecting them to be. The real question isn't whether GameStop beats estimates—it's whether Cohen's quiet rebuild is showing signs of life.

Sentiment has been washed out for a while now, and technical support is starting to firm up. In that environment, even modest progress could move the needle. This isn't about delivering miracles. It's about demonstrating basic operational competence, quarter after quarter.

Why This Matters

GameStop isn't promising to reinvent retail or revolutionize gaming. It's trying to prove it can run a profitable business without lighting investor capital on fire. That might sound underwhelming compared to the rocket-ship narratives of 2021, but in the post-meme world, competence might actually be the scarcest commodity.

The meme era taught us that hype can push stocks to absurd levels temporarily. What happens next is teaching us something else: when the hype fades, fundamentals still matter. GameStop is betting that boring discipline beats exciting chaos. We're about to see if the market agrees.