GameStop Corp. (NYSE:GME) is sitting on one of the largest cash hoards in retail, and management isn’t in a rush to deploy it.
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In an exclusive conversation with Benzinga, a GameStop spokesperson addressed the company’s roughly $9 billion in cash and investments with a single line:
“GameStop will continue to be disciplined.”
Asked whether a special dividend or buyback could be on the table if an acquisition fails to materialize within 12 months, the spokesperson declined to engage — “We don’t speculate on timelines or hypotheticals” — but notably did not rule either out.
The Cash Pile Is Doing Real Work — For Now
GameStop ended fiscal 2025 with $6.3 billion in cash and equivalents on its balance sheet, and total cash and investments approached $9 billion after including marketable securities and the company’s $519 million Bitcoin (CRYPTO: BTC) position.
That war chest has been doing meaningful work on the income statement: net interest income hit $271.5 million in fiscal 2025, up from $163.4 million the prior year, according to the company’s Q4 release.
For context, fiscal 2025 operating income came in at $232.1 million — meaning the treasury yield on the cash pile generated more income than the retail business did.
That’s a Berkshire-style dynamic at a video game retailer, and it raises a question shareholders are increasingly asking out loud: at what point does idle capital stop being optionality and start being a drag on returns?
The Acquisition Clock
GamStop CEO Ryan Cohen has publicly floated a “transformational” acquisition that he himself described as either “genius or totally foolish,” with no target named to date.
AMC Entertainment Holdings (NYSE:AMC), another meme-era balance sheet story, ultimately leaned into dilutive equity raises and debt management rather than capital returns — a path GameStop has so far avoided after its own ATM offerings and convertible raises.
The spokesperson’s refusal to deny a buyback or special dividend may be the most actionable line in the exchange.
“Disciplined” is doing a lot of work here. Shareholders will want to know how long the clock runs.
Photo: Jonathan Weiss / Shutterstock
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