GameStop Corp (GME) shares are catching a bid Friday as the stock trends across social media platforms, grabbing market attention following news that could make CEO Ryan Cohen one of the highest-paid executives in corporate history. Or it could make him nothing at all. That's the beauty of performance-based compensation.
A Compensation Plan That Swings for the Fences
GameStop announced that its board of directors has granted Cohen a stock option award that vests only if the company hits specific performance milestones. We're not talking about modest targets here. Cohen's compensation could reach approximately $35 billion if GameStop achieves both a market capitalization of $100 billion and cumulative EBITDA of $10 billion.
To put that in perspective, GameStop's current market cap sits at $9.3 billion. So Cohen needs to grow the company's value by roughly 975% to unlock his full payday. That's the kind of goal that either motivates superhuman effort or looks ridiculous in retrospect.
The company has already posted impressive numbers under Cohen's leadership. Since he joined the board, GameStop's market cap has climbed from $1.3 billion to $9.3 billion, representing growth of over 600%. The financial transformation is equally striking: GameStop went from a net loss of $381.3 million in fiscal 2021 to net income of $421.8 million over the last four fiscal quarters.
Technical Signals Flash Warning Signs
Despite Friday's gains, the technical picture for GameStop (GME) suggests the stock is facing headwinds. Shares are currently trading 1.2% below their 20-day simple moving average and 6.7% below their 100-day SMA, indicating bearish trends in both the short and medium term. Over the past 12 months, the stock has dropped approximately 33.55%, and it's positioned much closer to its 52-week lows than its highs.
The RSI reading of 48.95 sits in neutral territory, suggesting no immediate overbought or oversold conditions. Meanwhile, MACD is below its signal line, which typically indicates bearish pressure. The combination of neutral RSI and bearish MACD suggests mixed momentum—not quite a sell signal, but certainly not a ringing endorsement either.
Traders are watching two key levels: resistance at $24.50 and support at $20.00. Where the stock moves from here could depend largely on whether Friday's social media momentum translates into sustained buying interest.




