TBPN Live - FULL INTERVIEW: GameStop’s Ryan Cohen on Why He’s Buying eBay

Episode Date: May 5, 2026

This is our full conversation with Ryan Cohen, recorded live on TBPN.We discuss his $125/share bid to acquire eBay through a half cash, half stock deal and why he believes combining it with G...ameStop could unlock massive value, how he plans to cut billions in costs, operate with an owner mindset, and use GameStop’s physical store footprint to authenticate collectibles and drive growth, and why he sees eBay as a durable but under-optimized platform that can be rebuilt through live commerce, creator partnerships, and a faster, more focused operating model.Sign up for TBPN’s daily newsletter at TBPN.comFollow TBPN:https://TBPN.comhttps://x.com/tbpnhttps://open.spotify.com/show/2L6WMqY3GUPCGBD0dX6p00?si=674252d53acf4231https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/technology-brothers/id1772360235https://www.youtube.com/@TBPNLive

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Ryan Cohen, welcome to the show. Thank you so much for taking the time. How are you doing? How are you guys? Great to see you. Fantasticly. I would love an update. What can you share with us on the situation as things have developed since yesterday just to sort of set the, obviously this is moving very quickly. Where are we right now? What's happening? We made an offer yesterday. $125.25 a share. Half cash, half stock. That was funny, wasn't it?
Starting point is 00:00:35 Have you considered 49% cash? Why did you get to half cash, half stock? Can you unpack that a little bit, at least? Well, I mean, frankly, when you think about me going and running the eBay business, what we're proposing is for existing shareholders, to take half of their investment off the table, and that would be us providing them with $28 billion, which is like a 40% premium from when we started buying the stock.
Starting point is 00:01:08 And then they would be getting roughly, I mean, it depends on ultimately when the transaction closes, but they would be rolling the rest into the combined company of GameStop and E. I think I'm going to be I think that the company, the earnings power of the company is going to increase substantially as well as the ability to grow.
Starting point is 00:01:39 The platform stagnated over the last decade and I could do a lot with eBay. I love it. That's a very strong business and that's right up my alley. Take us through the big vision. Like in five years, at the helm, like, how big can this business be? Are you expanding it? Obviously, there's an
Starting point is 00:01:58 operational efficiency point, but what is the big picture? What's the blue sky pie in the sky vision for the combined entity? So where we've had success at GameStop and where eBay has had success is in collectibles, trading cards, collectibles. The founder of your show was talking about his mom block and like, that's a good example. That's, a perfect item to go and buy on eBay, but you're always concerned that isn't going to be real and the trust. And that's something that using GameStop 1,600 stores, we can immediately authenticate that item.
Starting point is 00:02:40 The seller can ship it or we can ship it, but we've got 1,600 access points that we can do live authentication. So we can go deep in collectibles, leveraging. our physical infrastructure. We can increase intake by bringing a lot more product onto the platform. And then there's a lot of other categories that I can grow in. And, you know, you look at live commerce as an example. I mean, eBay has 130 million users and they're getting crushed by competitors in
Starting point is 00:03:16 live commerce. So an owner's mentality, you know, I can, I want to own. I want to own eBay forever. I love that business. It's run like a public utility. It should have been wiped out, but it hasn't been. Yeah, it's been remarkably resilient. How many companies, how many startups have gone after a specific category on eBay,
Starting point is 00:03:41 raised $100 million plus dollars, and yet eBay has remained resilient. It shows that there's, you know, it's a really powerful platform. Yeah. That's why I love it. And, you know, the website still looks the same as it did in 1995, but everyone's tried to kill this thing. And it's still making over $2 billion a year. So that goes to show you the durability of the business. Talk about live commerce more. Would that be just a better integration with TikTok, Instagram streaming, Twitch streaming? Do you need to go and partner with big creators? Do you need to find out? your own platform for that? Like, how does that actually play out in a world where eBay and you
Starting point is 00:04:28 are making a bigger push into live commerce? It makes a lot of sense, but I'm wondering, like, how does it actually work? Yeah, it would be partnering with creators. I mean, they've got the platform. We would improve the platform, so it looks better and more consistent with the kind of UI that you have at competitors. But there's the user base, and so it's not something you have to market, it's building out better tech and partnering with creators. Yeah, and the correct incentive structure for those creators, because I bet you right now, you could probably go get some referral code or something, but it's not deeply integrated in a way that you can really accelerate on a social platform.
Starting point is 00:05:08 Why do you think eBay, has eBay been a target of any type of deal like this in the past? I'm not familiar with any off the top of my head, but why do you think maybe it hasn't been more of a target. And I guess, like, why do you think you can get more efficiency out of it than maybe some other potential buyers who, I'm sure, see their costs? You know, marketing is something that people gravitate towards, but I'm sure you're seeing other efficiencies as well. So in terms of the competitive landscape on an acquisition, I think there was some people circling around a few years ago. Nothing happened. The strategics can't really do it because I don't think that they would be able to clear antitrust.
Starting point is 00:05:58 So any of the large competitors wouldn't be able to acquire it. And, you know, I don't think that we would have any regulatory issues getting clearance on a merger. In terms of the efficiencies, GameStop is a good example. But GameStop is a dog and it could have been dead. And we've breathed a lot of life into this thing. Right? And you look at SG&A, we've pulled out, we've dropped SG&A by 47% $800 million by making marketing more efficient, almost turning off marketing.
Starting point is 00:06:46 I mean, everyone knows GameStop, everybody knows eBay. So you talk to the marketing people that tell you, like, it's going to tank revenues and all of this. And the reality is most of that marketing spends isn't making money, but everyone's trying to protect their jobs. And there's kickbacks. There's all kinds of perverse incentives. And so I'm running the business like a family business. You know, it's really not that complicated. And you look at eBay spending $2.5 billion to grow $1 million.
Starting point is 00:07:17 to grow one million users, two billion in cost cuts between sales and marketing and corporate overhead. It's not a lot. And it's not something that's going to take a few years. It's something that is going to happen fast, fast, fast because I'm putting leverage on this thing and I don't want to run a leverage of business. So I'm not going to run it hot. I'm going to pay down the leverage and I'm going to increase earnings. They're spending $5.5 billion on operating expenses on $11 billion business that has no inventory and its asset light. So it just, there's 11.5,000 employees and it doesn't make sense. It doesn't, you don't need, I could run that business. I could run that business from my house. Like it's eBay. It looks the same as it did in 1995. It didn't need. It need.
Starting point is 00:08:13 11 and a half. So is the Elon, Twitter, take private, somewhat of an inspiration here. There's been a number after that happened. In many ways, the business suffered, but maybe it wasn't because of the deep cuts that he did to the team. The service kept working. Yeah, the service kept working. It's still a great product. We've been surprised that more CEOs and management teams haven't done something like that with businesses that are household names, but somewhat stagnated. Is that an inspiration at all? Yeah, and Twitter is a good example. I mean, what really happened at Twitter was that the advertisers, I don't know what the situation is now, but they pretty much conspired against him. And, you know, it had nothing to do. My understanding is it really had nothing to do with the
Starting point is 00:09:04 cost cuts, more of just the advertisers conspiring against them because of the, the men political landscape and the fact that people apparently are against freedom of speech. And so, like, you look at the usability of the platform and the teams, the engineering teams are much smaller and they're innovating a lot faster. So it's actually the opposite. The more people you add, the more you slow things down. And the fewer people you have, the more, it's like a startup. You've got to always be in startup mode.
Starting point is 00:09:37 And you build big teams and nothing gets done anymore. Do you think LLMs will be a tailwind for eBay over the next decade? It feels like for the long tail of commerce, you're trying to find really specific items. It feels like LLMs and people doing research in these products could be catalyst for the business. Maybe there's things on eBay that would be tough to find. But if I'm really getting precise around prompting or running these sort of agentic searches, is maybe I have a higher likelihood of purchasing something. Yeah, I mean, I think about all of the things that can disrupt the business in the future.
Starting point is 00:10:19 And, you know, I think that eBay is the kind of business where the future of the business model is more certain than most tech businesses. And that's why it's done so well. And there's been such a lack of innovation, yet it hasn't been able to be disrupted. So I would expect that to continue to be the case. If it doesn't materialize as an M&A, are you looking at a board seat? You have a position. Will you be more active in a non-MNA scenario? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:10:58 I mean, I'm going to do whatever we need to do to protect our investment. and to improve the business. But the goal here isn't to be an activist. The goal is I want to own eBay. I want to run eBay. I want that to be my baby. I want to build something much larger. And cost-cutting, frankly, is the way to make the business more efficient to pay down the debt and innovate.
Starting point is 00:11:26 But when I think about what I can do with eBay in the future, like look at Chewy. Yeah, you know, eBay is like chewy on steroids. And so there's so much more runway and it's global. Yeah. I mean, it seems like a huge opportunity. How do you want to be comped? Based on performance 100%. Is there any tension between you and the shareholders? How do you actually create alignment there? It would be, my current compensation plan is tied really lofty metrics. And, And it's based on the first tranche. I've got to double market cap as an example just to hit the first tranche and the 10x it in order for it to fully vest. So I'm not interested in.
Starting point is 00:12:18 Yeah, I haven't taken a dollar of salary or any bonuses. You know, it's funny, actually. I just got a call from my team today that said, this is how I know. They hate me. They're not happy about this, by the way. The GameStop. This is the GameStop team? eBay.
Starting point is 00:12:36 No, eBay is not out. Oh, the eBay team. Okay. Yeah, after this interview, they're really not going to like me. But because they're going to find out I'm cutting marketing spend. And the board already is like me because I'm calling out all the board fees. But I get a call and I say, there's a, there's a, they're calling out your personal assistant. I said, what are you talking about?
Starting point is 00:12:56 And they said they went on the GameStop's career page and they saw that there's a listing for the personal assistant. and it's all kinds of personal stuff. And that's basically a CEO benefit. And, you know, it's basically not, you're using company resources personally. I pay for my personal assistant personally. I don't even pay for my, the company doesn't pay for my personal assistant. So they're already starting to get,
Starting point is 00:13:25 they're doing whatever they can. They want to fight 30. Have you, has any, major eBay shareholders reached out to you? Have you had, you know, what is the general sentiment? You know, how do you think? What do you think it'll look like if you take this directly to the shareholders? I don't know. I mean, I would want to, I want to own eBay at $125 a share. We're proposed, there's tax advantages to rolling it. But when I think about what eBay could be worth, if I'm running this business, I believe it's a heck of a lot more than $125 a share. And so,
Starting point is 00:14:05 I would roll 100% of the equity, but we'll see. We'll see what happens. What do you think of Michael Burry's critiques? A lot of people were talking about him exiting yesterday. He doesn't believe. Have you guys chatted? I haven't chatted with Michael in a long time. I've seen he's more active than he says his investing philosophy.
Starting point is 00:14:38 So I figured the, you know, his risk appetite and, you know, the leverage we're putting on just it didn't make sense for him. But it seemed as though it was more of a trade more so than anything. Yeah. Looking at the price action yesterday, is that reflective of sort of? sort of like a shakeout of non-believers and you feel like you have the right people around the table now? I am. When I think back to Chewy, every single day was a shakeout of. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:15:19 So I don't know. It's hard to diagnose the shareholder base. And I'm focused on what I could build over a long period of time. If I got my hands on eBay, I can build something worth a lot and much larger than it is. Was Paramount at all an inspiration? I've looked at it. What they did is really interesting, too. Just because a smaller company buying a much larger company, but the deal still went through.
Starting point is 00:15:55 The capital was marshaled. That was something that I think was unclear yesterday for, some people was, you know, half cash, half stock, where is it coming from? How much of this is just an ongoing conversation? And as you work through this process, you'll engage with other, you know, pools of capital or financiers to actually put together the final package. Do you have a date that you want this to, like, be done by? I mean, we have the cash, I mean, we have the cash accounted for today in terms of
Starting point is 00:16:30 a highly confident letter from our bank for the $20 billion plus we've got $9 billion of cash. And the rest would be them rolling the equity into the combined company. Sure. Yeah, I think that was the rolling of the equity was the thing that if it had got into the viral clip from CNBC yesterday, it would have made a lot more sense. I'm glad we're getting it in now. Yep. Is there, I guess, how much of your critique of eBay is specifically around the current management team? They've done a decent job. Look, it's anyone when you've got perverse financials. They're not operating like owner.
Starting point is 00:17:17 Just, you know, when you've got it all on the line, you're going to do whatever it's going to take. 20 hour days, seven days a week, you're not going to stop. And when equity is given out to you, like, candy. I mean, it's, it's, it's all companies. So, you know, the directors, uh, board of directors make four million dollars. It's like 350 to 450,000 or director. There's been no insider buying at the company. I mean, like it's not a surprise. They're not going to light the money on fire. They're not going to light the world on fire. You've got a bunch of professionals in the board and a professional management. Yeah. If this deal goes through roughly, what percentage of your personal net worth will be tied to it?
Starting point is 00:18:06 Well, I haven't done the math, but if things go correctly, then it better be the majority. Otherwise, I'm wasting my time. Yeah. What was your first memory using eBay? Were you a power seller back in the day? Very good question. I bought and sold DJ equipment on eBay back in, like, 2003. It was amazing.
Starting point is 00:18:32 I don't remember my first transaction, but I'm going to have to get back to you on that one. Okay. With GameStop, last time we talked, you were mentioning a little bit of an expansion into digital goods, less physical material and stuff. Do you think that there's an opportunity for eBay to play in a digital marketplace or in a world where certain collectibles or certain goods? become digital or the market shifts towards more digital goods and would you like to see eBay expand into that?
Starting point is 00:19:09 Yes and yes in terms of a digital marketplace and they are already doing it to a certain extent. I mean like all kinds of Roblox digital items are bought and sold but and I've actually bought them for my kids and there's so much fraud on the platform like we're buying stuff it's not a real item. end up having to do a chargeback, but then it ended up getting delivered. So you can't do a chargeback. So, like, they've got the basics of it, but it's not being done well. So, like, digital gaming, totally.
Starting point is 00:19:46 That's a huge opportunity to dig into. There's so much potential. On digital stuff, I guess, you're obviously interested in cutting costs. are you optimistic that stable coins might be a path to reducing costs? It's a high volume transaction business, obviously a lot of credit card fees. Maybe there's a way around that with stable coins. We hear that from a lot of stable coin founders. Haven't heard it from as many operators.
Starting point is 00:20:18 What do you think? I don't have a point of view on that. I haven't looked into it. I think the sellers would probably be eating the cost, but that's, potential option. Yeah. I don't know. Do you have any sense of how eBay is using AI internally today?
Starting point is 00:20:41 Have they spoken about it much? Do you believe they're getting very much leverage out of the models? Do you think there could be quite a bit more? I've seen that they've made listings easier in terms of just generating product descriptions and stuff like that. So I think they're kind of like doing the super easy stuff. Still, there's a lot of friction to sell a product on eBay. Like it's just, it's not easy.
Starting point is 00:21:16 So the benefit of our 1,600 stores is we have the ability to increase intake. But I would go through it and I would make it as simple as possible to have a real, item for Dale as a seller. And there's a lot of steps. It's just it's a pain in the ass. It's too difficult. Yeah. 1600 stores in the world where you combined eBay and GameStop. Do you expect that number to increase, decrease, stay the same? It's a good question. I mean, our footprint is a moving target. This was part of what appealed to me originally when I went into GameStop was the leases were short term. So they're like two to three year leases. And as we see how the business performs, we decide whether or not it makes sense to renew the store. So I mean,
Starting point is 00:22:17 it's going to be dependent on utility of the store. It's like if there's traffic and if profitability is increasing, we'll keep the stores open. And if it's not the, the case, then we'll shrink the store base. Okay, a couple other scenarios. In a world where an M&A doesn't happen, is there a business partnership to be done where verification of rare collectibles can happen at GameStop physical retail stores for a price and eBay is paying GameStop for that service? Is that something you've explored?
Starting point is 00:22:53 Is that something that's at all likely to happen? well that would so yes and it would basically take zero dollars in capex in order to something like that and it's a good idea um i hope that doesn't want to that doesn't happen because i want to i want to run the entire thing but if it doesn't then there i mean there's there's a partnership option i reached out to ebay like i don't know maybe a year or two years ago to talk to them about partnering and they didn't engage seriously. Like everyone that, everyone's on vacation. Everyone's always on vacation.
Starting point is 00:23:30 Like they're not available. They have assistance. I'll get back to you next week. And it's like, let's go. It's getting done now. So then they never get back to you. Then you're following up. It's like there's, there's no sense of urgency.
Starting point is 00:23:45 Yeah. At that company, there's no sense of urgency, frankly, at most company. And so it never gained any traction. Okay, Etsy is trading at $6 billion. Is that a target if the eBay plan doesn't come together? No collectibles action there. It was in the chat, I got to ask. eBay's just such a natural fit for the collectibles, leveraging our storeprint,
Starting point is 00:24:13 footprint, but then also my ability to cut costs and build something much larger at the company. So, I don't know, everything else is, if it doesn't work out, we could find something else, but I like eBay. It brings me back to my roots. What's something that eBay is not doing today that you think they could expand into, or is that even the right question? Do you think the core business is just so great and they're so dominant in many of these categories? that you just want to pour fuel on the fire. Live commerce. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:24:54 But to me, to me, that's an extension, right? Because they have a lot of inventory. It's just a new selling channel. Yeah. Yeah,
Starting point is 00:25:02 but I mean, in terms of doing that well, accelerating revenue growth, you know, I think that that is, that's big. And so going much deeper into collectibles, in luxury,
Starting point is 00:25:17 trading cards. There's a lot of run. way they are. Do you have a position on international capital providers? A lot of these big deals, the, you know, maybe they started 50 at half cash, half stock. They wind up being more leaning cash. That's what we saw with the Paramount Warner Brothers deal. Are you interested in talking to international sovereign wealth funds, that type of capital provider? We're looking at a variety of different options currently. Makes sense.
Starting point is 00:25:54 Mutual friend of the show and GameStop Mod Retro, they've been pretty aggressively pushing into this retro gaming category. How do you see that growing? Our team at the office recently got an old Xbox 360, fired it up. I can see retro gaming just getting more and more popular, but what's your view on the category right now and where do you think it's going? We are, we've, we have, the return rates are kind of high, but we're, we're building out the retro business in our stores currently. So that's a, that's a, it's a, it's still small, but it's a growing category for us.
Starting point is 00:26:39 What do you want to see the rest of this week? How do you, how do you, how do you, how do you see it playing out? I don't know. It's a good question. Balls in their, balls in their court. Pretty much. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:27:00 Well, we'll let you get to it. I'm sure you have more calls. Thanks for jumping on. Thanks for jumping on. You're welcome to join anytime. Let's do it again as, as the story progresses. But we're enjoying following along. And if anybody out there wants more information, it's on the website.
Starting point is 00:27:13 Yeah. It's on the website. Exactly. If anybody asks you how he's paying for it, just tell him half cash, half stock. You got the beginning and the end of the interview. Thank you so much for coming on the show. Great to see you, Ryan. Have a great rest of the week.
Starting point is 00:27:26 Good luck out there. Goodbye.

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