GameStop Corp. (GME) reports third quarter results after the bell Tuesday, and here's what makes this one different: nobody's talking about EPS whisper numbers or revenue beats. The real question is whether CEO Ryan Cohen's aggressively boring turnaround strategy can finally show something concrete. Something measurable. Something that isn't just vibes and balance sheet cash.
With expectations deliberately kept low and the stock quietly building technical strength heading into the print, this earnings report might actually be the defining checkpoint for Cohen's silent rebuild.
The Anti-Hype Playbook
Since becoming CEO in September 2023, Cohen has done something radical for a company that became famous for internet chaos: he's made GameStop profoundly uninteresting. No flashy interviews. No grand vision decks. No promises about the metaverse or blockchain collectibles saving retail gaming.
His approach is almost defiantly old-fashioned. Cut costs aggressively. Protect the cash pile. Close underperforming stores. Trim headcount. Eliminate distractions. Build toward profitability without selling a narrative to anyone. "Actions speak louder than words," he told shareholders earlier this year, making it clear he wants to be judged on actual results instead of marketing sizzle.
The frugality has been ruthless. The long-term vision borders on absurd: Cohen wants to build a company that lasts "decades or centuries," not just survives a few ugly quarters. It's the kind of thing that sounds either visionary or ridiculous depending entirely on whether it works.
And now Wall Street gets to see if any of it is real.
The Chart Is Starting to Cooperate
GameStop's stock remains down year-to-date, but something has clearly shifted beneath the surface. Shares are holding above $23.35 and sitting comfortably above the 8-day, 20-day and 50-day moving averages. That's a stacked bullish formation, the kind that suggests momentum is building rather than fading.
The MACD indicator has pushed into positive territory at 0.25. The RSI sits at 64.08, suggesting steady accumulation without frothy excitement. These aren't screaming buy signals, but they're not nothing either.
The level that actually matters right now is the 200-day moving average at $24.44. A clean break above that line would flip long-term trend models bullish for the first time in months and potentially force short sellers to reassess their positioning. It would also signal something bigger: that the technical damage from the meme stock hangover might finally be healing.
The setup is starting to mirror Cohen's entire strategy. Quiet pressure. Growing conviction. No theatrics. Just a slow, methodical tightening of the screws.
What's Actually at Stake Tuesday
Consensus expectations call for 20 cents EPS on $987 million in revenue, but honestly, those numbers might not matter as much as what Cohen says about the path forward. If he can demonstrate tightening execution and show glimpses of durable profitability, the lack of hype suddenly becomes an advantage. Expectations are so muted that even basic stability could trigger a reflexive rally.
But if the results disappoint or the commentary feels vague, that 200-day ceiling might stay firmly in place. And the market will start wondering whether Cohen's silence is actually strategic discipline or just empty space where a real plan should be.
Tuesday's earnings aren't about proving GameStop is the next tech giant or resurrecting meme stock mania. This is about something more fundamental: whether Cohen's minimalist, no-drama, ruthlessly disciplined approach is substantial enough to start rewriting the narrative. And whether the chart finally starts to reflect it.