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GameStop slumps after it fires former Amazon executive brought into modernize the gaming retailer

2023-06-08 11:41
Shares of GameStop are plunging before the opening bell after the company fired CEO Matthew Furlong, the former Amazon executive that was brought in two years ago to turn the struggling video game retailer around
GameStop slumps after it fires former Amazon executive brought into modernize the gaming retailer

Shares of GameStop are plunging before the opening bell after the company fired CEO Matthew Furlong, the former Amazon executive that was brought in two years ago to turn the struggling video game retailer around.

The company gave no reason for the dismissal and named Ryan Cohen, the company's biggest investor, as executive chairman. Cohen sent a cryptic tweet that read “Not for long” around the time the company announced Furlong's firing.

GameStop said Cohen will oversee investment and management of the company.

Shares tumbled more than 19% in premarket trading Thursday.

Furlong was named GameStop's CEO in June 2021 with the mandate of heading the company's digital remake. He had been the executive that oversaw Amazon’s Australia business and spent nine years with the company. Furlong was one of two Amazon executives hired at the time, the other being Mike Recupero, hired as GameStop's chief financial officer.

Cohen's holding company RC Ventures is the biggest investor in GameStop, holding an approximately 12% stake. Cohen co-founded Chewy, the online pet supply company, and had hoped to modernize the GameStop, founded in 1984.

Cohen began snapping up large stakes of GameStop at a time when the Grapevine, Texas, company was being buffeted by new technology. Gamers no longer needed GameStop because they were downloading games, rather than buying digital discs.

Furlong and other executives were brought it to execute Cohen's goal of getting GameStop more online.

After building a massive stake, Cohen joined GameStop's board in January 2021, along with two of his former Chewy colleagues.

GameStop became the embodiment of the “meme stock” craze two years ago, when a fanatical band of smaller-pocketed and novice investors encouraged each other to pile in. That helped trigger a “short squeeze,” on larger institutional Wall Street firms that were betting the company would continue to flounder.

The gambit worked and shares spiked more than 8,000% in 2021.

Shares have fallen drastically since then and now trade for around $20 each, which was about the cost of a share before the meme craze.