The GameStop Corp. (NYSE:GME) community got a spark on Monday from a Charles Payne social media post that perfectly encapsulates the current “hush-hush” era of the company.
- GME stock is climbing. See the chart and price action here.
Payne revealed he would not be interviewing CEO Ryan Cohen today, noting that Cohen is currently heads-down on something “monumental.”
The most telling part? Payne and Cohen agreed that a string of “I cannot answer that on advice of counsel” responses would be a disservice to the audience.
That kind of silence can be more deafening than a press release in the world of M&A.
The $9 Billion War Chest
GameStop is transforming into a high-stakes investment vehicle and is sitting on a staggering liquidity position:
The ‘Genius or Foolish’ Strategy
In recent interviews, Cohen has been clear about the nature of his plan. He is hunting for a “major acquisition” of a publicly traded company, likely in the consumer or retail sector.
He described the search as looking for “diamonds in the rough” with “sleepy management teams.”
“It's ultimately either going to be genius or totally, totally foolish,” Cohen said.
What We Know About the Acquisition Plans
While the specific target remains the “secret” Payne alluded to, the roadmap is becoming clear:
Target Profile: Cohen is seeking an undervalued, durable, and scalable consumer business that is currently larger than GameStop itself.
The $100 Billion Goal: Cohen's new compensation package is entirely performance-based. He only sees a payday if he brings GameStop's market cap to $100 billion and hits $10 billion in EBITDA.
The Burry Endorsement: Even “Big Short” legend Michael Burry has returned to the fold, backing Cohen's vision of using the “meme stock” cash pile to buy a “cash cow” business.
The Bottom Line
With 2026 seeing massive store closures, the old GameStop is being dismantled to fund the new GME.
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