The Psychology of GameStop's Management Communication - Will
investors listen?
GameStop's (GME) management is making every effort to recoup
investor trust after earnings missses earlier in the year. We now
have not one but two clear signals of management communicating
confidence in their business. They are practically yelling . .
.
"Trust us, GameStop is well positioned, we are gaining share. We
will come through with record earnings. The drivers for our
business are solid, don't lump us with the overall industry."
Will investors listen?
Let's take a look at recent events . . .
- This morning, GameStop management broke silence, and commented
outside their normal window that GameStop's new video games sales
for the all important November period were up a stunning 15%, this
in light of a 3% decline in industry coms in the same period
according to NPD.
- Just tree short weeks ago, after reporting earnings on the top
end of guidance for the 3rd quarter, management raised the bottom
of estimates from $2.40 to $2.45 while keeping the top end at $2.64
(representing EPS growth between 2% and 10%).
What does this mean to investors?
Managements announcements, first raising the floor on earnings and
then today's announcements must be contrasted with their earnings
misses in both Q2 and Q3 of this year. These misses coupled
with fears from digital distribution and increased competition have
clearly hurt GameStop's price, taking it to a near record low
valuation. Given the credibility loss management has suffered it is
a powerful statement to give not one but two bullish signals
to the market in a three week period.
"Trust us, GameStop is well positioned, we are gaining share. We
will come through with record earnings. The drivers for our
business are solid, don't lump us with the overall industry."
Will investors trust them this time around?
My take is that management cannot afford to miss again,
specially in light of their recent communications. Personally, I am
giving them the benefit of the doubt.