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dobtf2

@dobtf2

Beigetreten Temmuz 2014
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dobtf2
dobtf2@dobtf2·
@foxenflask Excellent post that should be read by every $GME shareholder right now
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bad robot
bad robot@foxenflask·
Prepare yourself for a proposition from $GME to increase the total authorized share count. I know that might make some of you uncomfortable, but hear me out because there's a very logical reason this is coming, and it's actually bullish. If you disagree or hate this idea, please give me the courtesy of reading my logic before you have a mid-life crisis in the comments. Right now, GameStop has ~448m shares outstanding against 1bn authorized. That's a 44.8% issued-to-authorized ratio. Sounds like plenty of headroom, right? Not when you factor in what's already committed: - 171.5m shares tied to RC's performance options - ~43.5m shares from the $1.3Bbn convertible notes ($29.85 strike) - ~77.8m shares from the $2.25bn convertible notes ($28.91 strike) That alone brings the fully diluted count to ~741m, or 74% of the authorized ceiling. And that's before a single acquisition dollar gets raised. So why would RC want to increase the limit now, while there's still room? Because good capital allocators do not wait until they are maxed out. They plan ahead, and there is clear precedent for this. RC has shown you exactly how he thinks about this. In January 2023, RC built a stake worth several hundred million dollars in Alibaba and personally pushed management to increase their buyback program from $40bn to $60bn. He told them they could hit double-digit sales growth and ~20% FCF growth over five years, but the shares were undervalued and the buyback was not aggressive enough. Alibaba listened and expanded the program. He also invested the vast majority of his personal wealth into Apple after selling Chewy, becoming one of Apple's largest individual shareholders (roughly $800m plus at peak). When sources close to RC described his Alibaba thesis to Reuters and the Wall Street Journal, they specifically pointed to Apple's capital return program as the blueprint RC wanted Alibaba to follow. RC called Apple “the strongest business in the world” and cited “disciplined capital allocation” as a core investment principle he learned from Buffett. He bought his first Apple share at age 15. The through-line here is pretty clear to me: RC is acutely aware of shareholder value mechanics, issued-to-authorized ratios, and capital discipline. He does not want to be forced into raises when his back is against the wall. He would rather have optionality. Buffett operated the exact same way, and there is direct precedent here. Berkshire Hathaway has 1.65m Class A shares authorized but only roughly 523,000 outstanding. That is a 31.7% utilization rate, and Buffett has maintained that kind of headroom for decades. He did not do that because he planned to flood the market with stock, but because he wanted the flexibility to act when opportunity appeared without going back to shareholders for emergency approvals. At the 1995 Berkshire annual meeting, when shareholders questioned whether authorizing preferred stock would dilute them, Buffett said: “There is no downside to this proposal. It is an authorization. It is not a command to issue shares.” He also explained that shareholders are only diluted if Berkshire receives less in value than it gives, and he repeated that principle in multiple letters and Q&A sessions over the years. In later commentary he went so far as to say he would “rather prep for a colonoscopy than issue Berkshire shares,” underscoring how seriously he treats actual issuance versus simple authorization. The lesson is simple: Buffett authorized far more shares than he ever used, kept massive headroom at all times, but was extremely disciplined about when and why he actually issued stock. That is the model RC appears to be following. Now let's do the math on what $100bn plus actually requires. RC has told us the plan: acquire a publicly traded consumer company “significantly larger” than GameStop. He has described it as “transformational” and said this has “never been done before in the history of capital markets.” GameStop currently sits at roughly $11bn market cap with roughly $8.8bn in cash. To get to $100bn by 2036 (the 10 year horizon of his compensation plan), he is going to need significantly more capital than what is on the balance sheet today. My estimate: at least another $20bn in equity and debt capital over the next 3 to 5 years. And honestly, that might be conservative if the vision is $100bn to $500bn. Think about it through the lens of how the Mag 7 plan their growth. Meta, Google, Microsoft, Amazon, they are each telling shareholders and the market they are spending $60bn to $80bn per year for the next 3 years on AI infrastructure. They are planning capex 2 to 4 years out and asking for patience. The market rewards that kind of forward planning. Now apply that same thinking to GameStop. This is not capex, but the principle is the same: how much capital does RC need to build a $100bn to $500bn conglomerate? The answer is: a lot. And it needs to come from a combination of cash flowing acquired businesses that can generate $4bn to $5bn per year, plus accretive equity raises and creative debt instruments (like those 0% converts). If you assume $20bn in additional equity raises at an average price of roughly $25 per share, that is roughly 800m new shares. Add that to the 741m fully diluted count and you are at roughly 1.54bn shares, well past the current 1B authorized limit. If RC wants to hover around a 60 percent issued-to-authorized ratio (which, based on his Alibaba and Apple track record, seems like a reasonable mental ceiling), he would need authorization for roughly 2.5bn to 3bn shares. My guess is we will see a proposal for 2bn to 3bn, likely the latter. Here is the key point most people miss: increasing the authorized share count is not dilution. It is giving the board the legal runway to execute over a multi year period. Dilution happens when shares are actually issued, and RC has shown through his $35bn all or nothing compensation plan that he only wins if the stock goes up. His 171.5m options are worthless unless GameStop hits $100bn in market cap and $10bn in cumulative EBITDA. Every share he issues needs to be accretive to that goal or he is lighting his own paycheck on fire. It takes money to buy whiskey. You do not build $100bn plus companies without capital. And it is far better to ask for authorization now, while utilization is at roughly 45%, than to come back begging when you are at 90% and the market reads it as desperation. This is forward planning. This is the Berkshire playbook. Do not let it scare you.
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Reese Politics
Reese Politics@ReesePolitics·
Omg who made this $GME
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dobtf2
dobtf2@dobtf2·
@ReesePolitics Congrats, now you will probably show up in the next SEC filing about Ryan's tweets lol
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Reese Politics
Reese Politics@ReesePolitics·
BREAKING: Ryan Cohen calls U.S. vs. eBay lawsuit ‘disgusting’ $GME 🚨
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Cointelegraph
Cointelegraph@Cointelegraph·
🇯🇵 ADOPTION: Japan is moving government bonds on-chain with 24/7 trading and stablecoin settlement coming as early as this year.
Cointelegraph tweet media
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Dalius - Special Sits
Dalius - Special Sits@InvestSpecial·
Few things are still true about $GME. GME crowd gets triggered real quick. Cohen's vagueness is apparently a cryptic communication style that most of us simply don't understand; only a select few thousand retail believers do. Cohen is a cult leader, no doubt.
Dalius - Special Sits@InvestSpecial

$GME bid clearly fails for $EBAY. But I think Cohen knows it too. There is simply no way this deal makes sense for eBay. So what's the play here? I guess it's just another way to bring retail attention to the stock. No other explanation comes to mind.

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dobtf2
dobtf2@dobtf2·
@rnewton7777 Not an analyst. Not advice. I have a tingly feeling in my you-know-what that by the end of the week will get back to the high 20s, maybe even push 30. Completely unsubstantiated and definitely not making any decisions based on it, but it's a feeling I have and can't explain.
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dobtf2
dobtf2@dobtf2·
@JRoland_ Thank you for blessing us with another -8% day 🙏
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dobtf2@dobtf2·
@rnewton7777 But how am I supposed to invert Newton when I am already inverting Cramer!? 😆
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dobtf2
dobtf2@dobtf2·
@MichaelTLoPiano Congratulations on the new lil GameStop shareholder 😄
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Dr. Michael T LoPiano
Dr. Michael T LoPiano@MichaelTLoPiano·
Hey everyone! Mrs. Mojo and I are home from the hospital with +1 lil Miss Mojo to add to the family! And wouldn't you know it - all in time for this week's $GME livestream! See you all shortly :) Link: youtube.com/live/ZpKJGRLbs…
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dobtf2
dobtf2@dobtf2·
@rnewton7777 @Jondinger I agree this would continue if nothing fundamentally changed about the company. If the deal goes through however and the entire structure and balance sheet changes overnight, I can't see how this status quo that you're describing can be kept up by the street. Maybe I'm wrong 🤷‍♂️
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dobtf2
dobtf2@dobtf2·
@naiveanalyst7 Absolutely hilarious to read those comments. And make no mistake, those will be the exact people telling us we just "got lucky" with our $GME investment once it really takes off...
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NaiveAnalyst
NaiveAnalyst@naiveanalyst7·
The number of people trolling $GME on this potential $EBAY acquisition, thinking it’s still just a meme stock and wondering how they would finance the deal, is mind-blowing to me. Have you not been paying attention to what this company has become?
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dobtf2
dobtf2@dobtf2·
@rnewton7777 Gained some wrinkles reading this post, thank you!
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dobtf2
dobtf2@dobtf2·
@rnewton7777 I member when 60 IV was considered low... MOAR :D
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dobtf2
dobtf2@dobtf2·
@rnewton7777 I still remember every time you talked about the bull and bear case in the sheet and you got to the point on the bull side of previously important players buying back in, you would go "C'mon Michael Burry!" haha That phrase is seared into my brain 😆
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