BuddyTheWebDog 🕳🐇🦮🕵️‍♀️

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BuddyTheWebDog 🕳🐇🦮🕵️‍♀️

BuddyTheWebDog 🕳🐇🦮🕵️‍♀️

@BuddyTheWebDog

GME // Dog. Phoenix. Arrogant Bastard. ngmipandas // Atlas, the compass. Sober. 🙏 speed limit now is 25. 1/1

(3,3,3) Katılım Ekim 2021
976 Takip Edilen476 Takipçiler
Sneed
Sneed@sneedweb·
🚨 BREAKING: GameStop has just dropped a new Form 425. $GME
Sneed tweet mediaSneed tweet media
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Jeff Bezos
Jeff Bezos@JeffBezos·
Thank you. The important part is zeroing out taxes on the bottom half. Best way to put money in someone’s pocket is to not take it out in the first place. Bottom half is only 3% of total tax revenue. But it’s very meaningful to that person. Zero it out.
Chris | Venture X Media@thecoachchris_

Facts It's great that Jeff Bezos thinks this way, because too many people who don't make money think that giving money to the government will solve a lot of their problems. They think these government programs are the answer, and it's clearly not. You can look at the federal level or at the state level, and you will see that a lot of government programs are simply waste.

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greg
greg@greg16676935420·
@ryancohen @grok replace the drink in his hand with a hot dog and put a rainbow bomb pop popsicle in his mouth instead of the cigarette
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Spotify
Spotify@Spotify·
One artist you discovered through Spotify and never looked back? 💚
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BuddyTheWebDog 🕳🐇🦮🕵️‍♀️
Unsolicited opinion: I think the negative press around ai data centers in America is really just psyops led by other governments Why? Because the race for ai supremacy is more nationally important than the space race and the Cold War combined The ai bubble will never pop due to the absolute magnitude of this technology I’m still only investing in GameStop though I’m a dog
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BuddyTheWebDog 🕳🐇🦮🕵️‍♀️ retweetledi
Ryan Cohen
Ryan Cohen@ryancohen·
🫪
Ethan Brooks@alt_w_v_g

You used to sell stuff on eBay. Maybe an old camera. Maybe Beanie Babies. Maybe a coat that didn't fit. You paid a small fee. The buyer got the thing. Everyone went home. That eBay is gone. The website looks the same. The logo is the same. The 135 million buyers are still there. But the company isn't really a marketplace anymore. It is an advertising business with a marketplace attached for distribution. Last year, sellers paid eBay $2 billion just to make sure their own listings showed up. Read that again. The board calls this growth. A Canadian who runs a video game store called it something else. Here is what actually happened. In 2020 the board hired a new CEO. His name is Jamie Iannone. He arrived with a strategy called focused categories. In plain English, that means leaning into the stuff people pay extra for. Sneakers. Watches. Trading cards. Auto parts. The everyday seller, the person with the camera and the coat, was no longer the customer. The customer was now the seller who would pay to be seen. In 2025 eBay did $80 billion in transactions. They kept $11 billion of that as revenue. Of that $11 billion, $2 billion came from advertising. Sellers paid them $2 billion to promote listings on a website those sellers already pay fees to use. That is the growth story. In the same year, the number of enthusiast buyers, eBay's own term for their best customers, was 16 million. It was also 16 million the year before. And the year before that. And the year before that. Four years. Zero growth. They mention this on every earnings call without mentioning it. So what does a company do when growth stops? It buys back its own stock. In 2025, eBay returned over $3 billion to shareholders. Most of that was buybacks. In February the board authorized another $2 billion on top. Buybacks shrink the share count. Earnings per share goes up even when earnings stay flat. The stock price follows. The stock was $68 a year ago. It is $108 today. The company did not improve. The denominator got smaller. Then a man from Canada noticed. His name is Ryan Cohen. He runs GameStop. He started his career selling pet food online and sold it to PetSmart for $3.35 billion. He looked at eBay. 135 million buyers. $80 billion in transactions. Real margins. Real cash flow. A board harvesting the business instead of running it. He bought 5% of the company through derivatives and stock. Then on May 4, he offered to buy the rest. $125 per share. $56 billion total. On May 12, the eBay board rejected the bid. They called it not credible. The math is credible. What the board means by not credible is we would have to explain why we sold. Then Cohen went on Piers Morgan. He said eBay is run by a bunch of losers with perverse financial incentives. He pointed out that eBay's CEO has been paid $144 million over six years. He pointed out that he personally takes no salary and has put $128 million of his own money into the company he runs. You do not have to like Ryan Cohen to notice he is making a point that is hard to argue with. eBay used to be a place where regular people sold things to other regular people. Now it is a $48 billion company whose largest growth driver is charging its own sellers to advertise to a buyer base that stopped growing four years ago, while spending billions a year buying its own stock to make the chart go up. The board calls this strategy. A video game CEO from Canada called it what it is. The market is now waiting to see who else agrees. Plz fix. Thx. Sent from my iPhone

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BuddyTheWebDog 🕳🐇🦮🕵️‍♀️
As much as I want the eBay deal to go through, I think this was a tremendous misplay The initial pr release was hype Then the @ryancohen on cnbc was a complete dumpster fire PR team went into overdrive to get RC any interview he could for positive spin, but then he gives away so much intel on eBay’s inherent worth that it drives their stock price up Leaving a hostile takeover the only way out but we have to pay such a large premium if that happens due to competition The chances of any company to merge with eBay other than GameStop is like 95% now , since this pr nightmare started This is all hindsight now but I can tell you that @ryancohen needs to spend 2 weeks at a community college speech and debate class to learn to talk around a question if he doesn’t want to answer it. I listened to every interview and time after time his answer to a long winded question was “yah” followed by awkward silence and it would legitimately make me cringe Even if we acquire eBay and 100x the combined company, this whole thing could potentially cost BILLIONS of dollars in total premiums. This is setting money on fire, which is the exact argument we have to take over eBay I’m a dog
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BuddyTheWebDog 🕳🐇🦮🕵️‍♀️ retweetledi
Polymarket
Polymarket@Polymarket·
JUST IN: GameStop CEO Ryan Cohen says eBay is run by "a bunch of losers"
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