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GameStop Authorizes $2 Billion Buyback as Profits Rise

Published Jun 3, 2026
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A stack of $10,000 bundles of $100 bills is placed on the ground outside a commercial building, with an empty parking lot in the background.
Summary:
  • GameStop's board approved a $2 billion share buyback program authorized through June 2, 2029.
  • Net income rose to $389.6 million for the quarter, up sharply from $44.8 million a year ago, with revenue climbing 14% to $835.3 million.
  • CEO Ryan Cohen, who is also pursuing an unsolicited $56 billion bid for eBay, now has another lever to deploy from GameStop's roughly $8.4 billion cash position.

GameStop spent years collecting cash from meme-era stock sales, and now they're putting some of it toward buying back their own stock.

The board just greenlit a $2 billion buyback program. That's a big swing for a company best known for being bought, not buying.

The Buyback Signal

A buyback is when a company uses its cash to purchase its own shares on the open market. That shrinks the share count and usually pushes the price up, because each remaining share owns a slightly bigger piece of the company.

GameStop has been sitting on a cash pile of roughly $8.4 billion in cash and marketable securities, much of it raised by selling stock during the 2021 meme rally and the follow-on offerings that came after.

Until now, that money has mostly sat in Treasuries, with a recent slice moved into Bitcoin.

A $2 billion buyback - authorized through June 2, 2029 - is the first real signal that management thinks the stock is worth buying at today's price.

We break down moves like this every morning in Market Briefs - five minutes a day, with a free investing masterclass thrown in when you sign up.

Profits Are Up - And So Is Revenue

GameStop also posted higher profit for the quarter. Net income hit $389.6 million, up from $44.8 million a year ago.

Revenue rose 14% to $835.3 million, driven by strong collectibles demand.

Over the past two years the company has closed weak stores, shrunk inventory, and tightened margins. Now collectibles are doing some of the heavy lifting on the top line - and the discipline is showing up in profit.

That's a different kind of GameStop than the one most investors remember.

What to Watch

A buyback this size is unusual for a company with GameStop's history, especially since a big chunk of the float sits in retail hands and the stock still trades on sentiment as much as fundamentals.

If management actually executes the full $2 billion, the supply of shares on the market shrinks in a real way. How fast they move - and how Ryan Cohen reads the price - will shape what happens next.

Cohen, who is also pushing an unsolicited $56 billion bid for eBay and has built GameStop's eBay stake to roughly 6.6%, now has another lever to pull with the company's cash.

The company that became a symbol of retail investors buying stock just decided to do the same thing itself.

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