GameStop slumps as its plan to sell debt to fund bitcoin purchases raises some questions

FILE - The sign hangs above the doorway into a GameStop store, June 11, 2024, in Lone Tree, Colo. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski, file) (David Zalubowski, Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)

GameStop shares sunk Thursday after its plan to sell debt in an effort to fund purchases of bitcoin raised some questions on Wall Street.

The video game retailer announced a private offering of $1.3 billion in debt. The company said earlier this week that it plans to purchase bitcoin as a reserve asset. It will use proceeds from this debt offering to buy the cryptocurrency.

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The stock slumped 22.1%, marking a sharp reversal from Tuesday's 11.7% gain. Trading in GameStop's stock, which is often included with other so-called ā€œmemeā€ stocks, can be volatile.

The debt offering comes at a big premium to the company's value. It could also leave out a large portion of GameStop's investors who wouldn't qualify for the offering under certain investor requirements, according to a note from Wedbush led by analyst Michael Pachter.

ā€œWe find it hard to understand why any investor would be pay more than two times cash value for the potential for GameStop to convert that cash into Bitcoin, particularly since the same investors can invest in Bitcoin or a Bitcoin ETF themselves,ā€ he said in the note.

The company has around $4.8 billion in cash and the conversion will bring its cash to $6.1 billion, he said. The stock is currently valued at about $12.7 billion.

GameStop shares are down substantially from last May when influential investor Keith Gill, popularly known as ā€œRoaring Kitty,ā€² appeared online for the first time in three years to declare his support for GameStop.

Gill helped ignite a ā€œmeme" stock craze in early 2021, when GameStopā€™s stock price soared above $120.

ā€œDespite a complete lack of articulated strategy, GameStop has consistently been able to capitalize on the existence of a ā€˜greater foolā€™ willing to pay more than twice its asset value for its shares, and so far, theyā€™ve been right,ā€ Pachter said.

Even given their reservations about the note offering and bitcoin strategy, Wedbush analysts said in a separate note that they were ā€œimpressedā€ by GameStop's ability to generate an operating profit in the fourth quarter of 2024 and ā€œare more confident than we have been in the past that GameStop can achieve breakeven results for the foreseeable future.ā€


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