GameStop is pouring money into Bitcoin, but that’s not the company’s main focus these days.
As the video game industry goes increasingly digital, cutting out retailers for software sales, GameStop is pivoting toward the trading-card business, CEO Ryan Cohen said at the company’s annual shareholder meeting.
“We’re focusing on trading cards as a natural extension of our existing business,” Cohen said. “The trading card market, whether it’s sports, Pokémon or collectibles, is aligned with our heritage. It fits our trade and model. It appeals to our core customer base. And it’s deeply embedded in physical retail.”
Analysts have largely thrown up their hands when it comes to the company, which no longer holds analyst calls or offers guidance.
“GameStop’s entry into the trading-card business has delivered modest success, but we see no potential for a rebound in GameStop’s core business, following failed attempts at an omnichannel strategy and NFT trading,” said Wedbush’s Michael Pachter in a note to investors earlier this month. “That said, despite a complete lack of an articulated strategy, GameStop has consistently been able to capitalize on the existence of ‘greater fool[s]’ willing to pay more than twice its asset value for its shares—and so far, they’ve been right.”