In a move that mirrors the volatility and ambition of its “meme-stock” history, GameStop (GME) has launched an unsolicited $56 billion bid to acquire the e-commerce giant eBay. CEO Ryan Cohen, the activist investor who became a retail-trading icon, is prepared to go to war with eBay’s board to finalize what would be one of the most unconventional mergers in tech history.
The Offer at a Glance
GameStop’s proposal seeks to swallow a company nearly four times its size, offering a significant premium to entice eBay shareholders.
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Offer Price: $125 per share, representing a 20% premium over eBay’s most recent closing price.
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Deal Structure: A 50-50 split of cash and stock.
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Financing: Cohen claims to have $9.4 billion in cash on hand, supplemented by a $20 billion debt commitment from TD Securities and potential backing from Middle Eastern sovereign wealth funds.
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Existing Stake: GameStop has already quietly amassed a 5% stake in eBay through shares and derivatives.
The Vision: A New Challenger to Amazon
Ryan Cohen’s pitch centers on a radical transformation of both companies. He argues that combining GameStop’s physical footprint with eBay’s digital marketplace could create a “legit competitor to Amazon.”
The Strategic “Synergy”:
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Cost Cutting: Cohen pledges to slash $2 billion in annualized costs from eBay within the first year.
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Physical Infrastructure: GameStop’s 1,600 U.S. stores would serve as a national network for eBay’s authentication, fulfillment, and “live commerce” (real-time auctions).
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Diversification: For GameStop, this deal provides an immediate escape from the declining physical video game market; for eBay, it adds a physical layer to its purely digital collectibles and motors business.
Comparative Market Standing (as of May 2026)
| Metric | GameStop (GME) | eBay (EBAY) |
| Market Cap | ~$12 Billion | ~$46 Billion |
| Year-to-Date Performance | +32.1% | +19.5% |
| Recent Revenue Trend | -14% (Q4) | Exceeding Estimates |
| Proposed New Value | — | $56 Billion |
Hostile Intentions and Potential Proxy War
The term “hostile” applies because Cohen is bypassing the eBay board of directors—who have not yet responded—and appealing directly to the shareholders. If the board rejects the offer, Cohen has signaled he is ready for a proxy fight, a maneuver where he would attempt to replace eBay’s board members with his own nominees to force the deal through.
The Bottom Line
While critics argue that a “meme-stock” company buying a legacy tech titan is an overreach fueled by market exuberance, Cohen’s track record of aggressive cost-cutting and turnaround strategies has earned him a cult-like following. If successful, the deal would merge 1990s nostalgia with a modern fulfillment powerhouse, fundamentally altering the landscape of American e-commerce.

