GameStop's CEO doesn't take a salary, a bonus, or a stock package. He only gets paid if the company hits a $20 billion market cap and books billions in profit.
This week, he asked investors for more than a billion extra shares to chase exactly that outcome, with eBay sitting at the center of the plan.
The Ask
In a Thursday filing, GameStop's board asked shareholders to bump the company's authorized common stock to 2.5 billion shares, up from the current 1 billion, with all stock classes combined now ceilinged at 2.505 billion.
The official reason is "financial flexibility," which is the polite way to say GameStop wants room to do a stock-funded deal without coming back to investors for permission.
That matters because GameStop is still pursuing a takeover of eBay after an earlier offer was rejected, and a deal that big would lean heavily on new stock to get done.
As of May 20, GameStop had about 448.7 million shares outstanding, with another 269 million already cleared for future issuance, according to its SEC proxy filing.
The new ceiling would more than double the headroom on top of that, giving the board enough share capacity to fund a multi-billion-dollar acquisition without another vote.
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Ryan Cohen's Bet
Ryan Cohen's pay structure is unusual, with no salary, no cash bonus, and no time-based stock awards on the table.
His only payout is a performance-based option that vests only if GameStop holds a sustained market cap above $20 billion and produces billions in cumulative profit, according to the board.
Right now, GameStop's market cap is well below that bar. Shares traded down about 2% to $22 on Friday, leaving the stock up roughly 10% so far this year.
For Cohen, the eBay angle is the move that could get him paid one day. For shareholders, it's the move that decides whether their stock gets diluted or doubled.
What To Watch
The vote happens at GameStop's annual meeting on July 7, in a virtual-only format, with the same ballot including the election of five directors and the ratification of KPMG as auditor.
If shareholders approve the share count increase, expect another formal eBay bid to follow soon after.
If they say no, Cohen has to find another path to that $20 billion market cap, with fewer tools to make it happen.
Either way, this is the move that decides whether Cohen's playbook ever pays off.
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