GameStop: The Return Of Meme Stock Idiocy

 | Apr 05, 2022 01:27AM ET

Meme stock mania is back in full idiocy. And it’s time again to revisit GameStop (NYSE:GME) as a short.

On Mar. 14, GME closed at $78. The stock had been down nearly 75% since June 9, 2021. But after the market closed on Mar. 21, GME Chairman Ryan Cohen, announced that he bought 100,000 shares in the open market, taking his ownership stake to 11.9%. This drove the stock price from $94 to as high as $189 by Mar. 28.

Then after the market closed on Mar. 31, GME announced its intent to do a stock-split. The stock jumped after hours from its closing price that day of $165 to as high as $203. It opened at $189 Friday and sold off steadily during the day to as low as $155, before closing at $163. Note: GME is doing a "stock dividend" rather than a stock split. While there’s GAAP accounting differences with respect to the shareholders equity accounting, for practical purposes there’s no difference.

There’s a lot to unpack there, not the least of which is the fact that the entire two-event sequence reeks of intentional stock price manipulation. Cohen clearly understands that the announcement of both his share purchase and the stock split would cause the Wall St Bets Reddit meme-chasing "apes" to stampede into the stock and OTM call options.

This is an explosive combination given that the share float of GME is just 62.48m shares and short-interest is close to 20%. Cohen announced his share purchase just nine days ahead of the stock-split announcement. Of course, he knew ahead of his stock purchase that his next move would be to announce the stock-split.

This is "stock manipulation" 101. Unfortunately, we live in an era in which the regulators look the other way. Many of them indirectly benefit in that they previously worked at Wall Street firms and maintain equity in their former banks. As an example, SEC Chairman, Gary Gensler, was at one time in the running to become CEO of Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS).

In early March, Cohen announced that he had a 9.8% stake in Bed Bath & Beyond  (NASDAQ:BBBY), another Reddit meme stock that loses $100’s of millions on an operating basis. That announcement drove the stock from $16 to as high as $30.

BBBY closed at $22.84 on Friday. As with GME, BBBY has a small share float, with a 21% short interest plus a rabid meme stock following that boasts about its ability to create short-squeezes in stocks with high short-interest and a small float. It would be naïve to believe that Cohen is not exploiting this dynamic.

Does investing in GME make sense from a fundamental standpoint? Zerohedge referenced the stock purchase/stock split combo maneuver as:

"a brilliant ruse by the management team which is far more focused on financial engineering and how to create stock squeezes than actually running the mostly worthless company."

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Cohen made his fortune as the co-founder of the online pet store, Chewy (NYSE:CHWY). CHWY has never been profitable. He took his stake in GME in November 2020, seeking to transform GME from a brick/mortar-store based retail business into an e-commerce operation.

Here’s the operating performance of the business over the last three years (GME released its FY 2021 Q4/full-year on Mar. 17: