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GameStop reports 14% rise in quarterly revenue, unveils $2 billion share buyback

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By Reuters | Updated: June 3, 2026

June 2 (Reuters) – Videogame retailer GameStop (GME.N) posted a 14% rise in ​quarterly revenue on Tuesday, buoyed by strong collectibles ‌demand, and said its board approved a new $2 billion share repurchase program.

The company has shifted focus from traditional hardware sales toward ​trading cards and collectibles as gamers move ​toward digital downloads and online purchases. Its shares ⁠jumped 7.4% in extended trading.

For the first quarter ended ​May 2, GameStop’s net sales came in at $835.3 million, ​compared with $732.4 million a year ago.

The results come as the company presses ahead with its bid to acquire eBay (EBAY.O) after the ​e-commerce company rejected its unsolicited $56 billion offer last month.

GameStop increased its ​stake in eBay to about 6.6% from around 5%, while the ‌videogame ⁠retailer’s CEO Ryan Cohen said he remained committed to acquiring the company and could take the offer directly to shareholders if needed.

EBay, which is roughly five times ​as large ​as GameStop, called ⁠the proposal “neither credible nor attractive.”

Cohen has argued that by combining GameStop and eBay ​he could cut costs and find synergies ​to create ⁠a much bigger enterprise.

GameStop reported net income of $389.6 million for the first quarter, compared with $44.8 million a year ⁠ago.

The ​new share buyback program would run ​through June 2, 2029, replacing the prior authorization from March 2019.

Reporting ​by Harshita Mary Varghese in Bengaluru; Editing by Shilpi Majumdar

© Thomson Reuters 2026