GameStop Corp (GME) is having one of those quarters where the numbers tell two different stories. The video game retailer beat earnings expectations on Tuesday, posting 24 cents per share against projections of 20 cents. Great news, right? Well, not quite enough to satisfy Wall Street.
Revenue came in at $821 million, missing estimates of $987.28 million by a pretty substantial margin and marking a 4.5% decline year-over-year. That revenue miss overshadowed the earnings beat, sending shares down roughly 7% over the past week to hover around $21.50.
The Good, The Bad, and The Collectibles
Here's where things get interesting. While GameStop's core hardware and software segments continued their decline, collectibles revenue jumped to $256.1 million, offering a bright spot in an otherwise challenging quarter. More impressively, the company swung from a $33.4 million operating loss last year to $41.3 million in operating income this quarter.
That turnaround wasn't magic. GameStop aggressively cut selling, general and administrative expenses to $221.4 million from $282.0 million in the prior year quarter. That reduction more than offset the revenue decline, which explains how they managed to beat on earnings while missing on sales.
A Tale of Two Markets
The geographic breakdown reveals something fascinating about GameStop's business. U.S. net sales actually grew, climbing to $617.0 million compared to $551.7 million last year. That's solid domestic momentum. The problem? International markets contracted sharply, erasing those domestic gains and then some.
This suggests the turnaround strategy is gaining traction domestically even as the company's global footprint shrinks. Whether that's intentional repositioning or simply losing ground overseas is the question investors are wrestling with.
Cash Rich, Momentum Poor
GameStop sits on a fortress balance sheet with $8.8 billion in cash and approximately $519 million in Bitcoin holdings. That financial cushion gives the company runway to continue its transformation efforts without immediate pressure.
Yet the stock's technical picture looks weak, trading below both its 50-day and 200-day moving averages. The stock currently trades near $21.41, within its 52-week range of $19.93 to $35.81. That lower bound could serve as critical support, while the upper end represents formidable resistance in the near term.
The market seems to be saying: solid operational progress, but show us the revenue growth. Until sales trends reverse more convincingly, investors appear content to wait on the sidelines.




