Price-to-sales is probably the best metric to use since GME is reinvesting all of its free cashflow into buying more assets similar to what Amazon did for 10 years straight without showing even 1 cent in earnings. Yes, Amazon showed zero earnings for 10 years and still rocketed to the moon (presumably because they were buying up assets with all free cashflow and their book value was increasing just like GME is doing).
Current P/S for GME is 0.65 [~$6B in revenue in 2023]
According to above metrics, the correct current price of GME may be somewhere around $59 assuming zero short squeeze impact. It trades at $11.25 right now.
Wow! They really had $6B in revenue in 2023? Maybe the stores I've seen aren't representative, but the ones I have been by don't seem to have many customers.
Apparently lots of online sales for electronics. I get all my electronics from them rather than Amazon. Retail stores appear to be promotion focus during big new game and new console rollouts. Significant sales in used games, accessories, used consoles, and game-related toys if you dig into their sales categories. They appear to be a mini-Amazon looking to add new categories and challenge Amazon directly at some point. Amazon is a contrived artificial monopoly and needs competition across the board.
Gamestop has added significant distribution warehouse capacity (similar to Amazon warehouses) and is putting logistics in place for something huge.
Gamestop is very likely only one of several attack vectors on the exposure of the fraudulent stock market financial system.
Amazon rabbit hole is very deep. Lots of evidence that Amazon itself (at Bezos’s direction) was orchestrating in collusion with short hedge funds the short-selling fake share manipulation on at least 20 companies they bought via merger and acquisition (in order to get a good price or force target company to sellout via coercion).
It appears that Alphabet, Facebook, and Microsoft have all used the same above technique at least once.
Price-to-sales is probably the best metric to use since GME is reinvesting all of its free cashflow into buying more assets similar to what Amazon did for 10 years straight without showing even 1 cent in earnings. Yes, Amazon showed zero earnings for 10 years and still rocketed to the moon (presumably because they were buying up assets with all free cashflow and their book value was increasing just like GME is doing).
Current P/S for GME is 0.65 [~$6B in revenue in 2023]
Current P/S for MSFT is 13.9
Current P/S for Amazon is 3.4
https://ycharts.com/companies/GME/ps_ratio
According to above metrics, the correct current price of GME may be somewhere around $59 assuming zero short squeeze impact. It trades at $11.25 right now.
Wow! They really had $6B in revenue in 2023? Maybe the stores I've seen aren't representative, but the ones I have been by don't seem to have many customers.
Apparently lots of online sales for electronics. I get all my electronics from them rather than Amazon. Retail stores appear to be promotion focus during big new game and new console rollouts. Significant sales in used games, accessories, used consoles, and game-related toys if you dig into their sales categories. They appear to be a mini-Amazon looking to add new categories and challenge Amazon directly at some point. Amazon is a contrived artificial monopoly and needs competition across the board.
Gamestop has added significant distribution warehouse capacity (similar to Amazon warehouses) and is putting logistics in place for something huge.
Sounds like they have some pretty smart people working for them! These days it's pretty hard for companies to break free of the Amazon stranglehold.
Gamestop is very likely only one of several attack vectors on the exposure of the fraudulent stock market financial system.
Amazon rabbit hole is very deep. Lots of evidence that Amazon itself (at Bezos’s direction) was orchestrating in collusion with short hedge funds the short-selling fake share manipulation on at least 20 companies they bought via merger and acquisition (in order to get a good price or force target company to sellout via coercion).
It appears that Alphabet, Facebook, and Microsoft have all used the same above technique at least once.