Breaking: GameStop Official $55.5B eBay Offer, Promises $2B in Annual Cuts
GameStop Confirms $55.5 Billion Bid for eBay
GameStop has officially entered the race to acquire e-commerce giant eBay, announcing on May 3 a half-cash, half-stock offer valued at approximately $55.5 billion for 100% of the company. The deal, first reported over the weekend, comes with a promise of deep cost-cutting: $2 billion in annualized reductions within twelve months of closing.

The $2 Billion Cost-Cut Breakdown
GameStop outlined three primary areas for slashing expenses:
- Sales & Marketing: $1.2 billion in cuts. The company argues that heavy spending is not translating into user growth on a marketplace with near-universal brand recognition.
- Product Development: $300 million in reductions. GameStop notes that product development expenses grew 11% in fiscal 2025 while revenue only rose 8%.
- General & Administrative: $500 million in savings from consolidating finance, HR, real estate, legal, IT, and professional services across the combined company.
"eBay spent $2.4 billion on sales and marketing in fiscal 2025 while only adding one million net active buyers (134M to 135M—a net increase of less than 0.75%)," GameStop said in its investor presentation. The company projected that on cost reductions alone, eBay's diluted GAAP earnings per share from continuing operations would rise from $4.26 to $7.79 in year one.
Background: A Goliath Bid from a David-Size Firm
GameStop's market capitalization sits at just over $11 billion, and it holds roughly $9.4 billion in cash and liquid investments. To bridge the enormous gap, the company has obtained a "highly-confident letter" from TD Securities for up to $20 billion in financing—though "highly confident" is not a binding commitment. That still leaves a shortfall of about $15 billion.
GameStop could raise additional funds by issuing more stock, but that would dilute existing shareholders' value. When pressed on the funding gap in a CNBC interview, CEO Ryan Cohen avoided specifics. "There's going to be some leverage on the balance sheet in order to make an acquisition possible. But it's also going to be making a lot more money in the future than it is today, because it's going to be run a lot more efficiently," Cohen said. He added: "When a business is not growing users and spending $2.5 billion in sales and marketing, there's a lot of fat to cut. And the earnings power, as we laid out in our investor presentation, could be way higher, double the earnings in a pretty short period of time."

GameStop's 1,600 U.S. retail locations could provide eBay with a national network for authentication, intake, fulfillment, and live commerce—a strategic advantage the company highlighted.
What This Means
If the deal goes through, significant job cuts are likely across eBay's sales, marketing, product development, and administrative departments. GameStop's aggressive cost-reduction plan aims to boost shareholder value, but it raises concerns about the human impact. The funding gap remains a critical challenge: GameStop must find or raise another $15 billion to seal the acquisition, and the use of leverage or stock dilution carries risks.
Analysts are watching closely. As noted by Barron's (via MSN), the combination of GameStop's relatively small size and the sheer scale of the bid makes this one of the most audacious M&A plays in recent memory. The outcome will depend on whether lenders and shareholders believe Cohen's vision of a leaner, more profitable eBay is achievable—and whether the promised $2 billion in cuts can be realized without crippling the business.
This is a developing story. For more on GameStop's previous moves, see our background section.