The difference is the supply of bitcoin is fixed. Whereas a company can issue shares at any time. Obviously if the market cap stays at $30 billion for a long time, Gamestop management is going to start spending their overvalued stock like drunken sailors.
First it'll be just to plug up the money their operations are constantly losing. Then they'll start going on acquisition sprees, giving out giant compensation packages, get into empire building. Maybe they'll buy a movie studio or a Vegas casino. That's a constant supply of new stock that will keep pushing down the price. It's the same way that AOL used their stock to buy Time Warner during the Internet bubble.
AMC already took advantage of the meme madness by selling a huge chunk of shares to lock in some cash. That's why AMC didn't moon like GME. But give it a week or two, and GME's board will pretty much be forced to do the same thing.
GME issuing shares would be the smart thing to do.
The primary goal of a stock market is really to allow exactly that. The market determines the cost of capital for each company, thereby influencing the allocation of capital in society. The question then becomes how efficiently the company can put that capital to use.
Agreed. I think the smart play is to come out with a grand plan that hopefully entices some people to hold onto their stock and keep the game going. Possibly use this to convince people that a small issuance of additional shares to do X would be a good idea. Then, just live off of the crazy publicity and hopefully good will this affords you.
The supply of Bitcoin is “limited” but in reality it’s irrelevant. 1 satoshi is 0.00000001 which means for every 1 Bitcoin in circulation there is actually 100,000,000 satoshi. You can’t buy a hundred millionth of GME.
The supply of Bitcoin being limited absolutely is relevant, and you can buy partial shares of stock (not sure if you can go down to a hundred millionth, but not sure that's relevant). The point is that Gamestop can issue new shares, diluting the existing supply, making it a terrible "store of value". Bitcoin on the other hand has a fixed supply that cannot be increased.
Supply constraints don’t matter when there is virtually infinite availability. There are nearly 19,000,000 coins in circulation and each coin represents 100,000,000 swappable assets. We will reach the heat death of the universe before Bitcoin supply matters.
First it'll be just to plug up the money their operations are constantly losing. Then they'll start going on acquisition sprees, giving out giant compensation packages, get into empire building. Maybe they'll buy a movie studio or a Vegas casino. That's a constant supply of new stock that will keep pushing down the price. It's the same way that AOL used their stock to buy Time Warner during the Internet bubble.
AMC already took advantage of the meme madness by selling a huge chunk of shares to lock in some cash. That's why AMC didn't moon like GME. But give it a week or two, and GME's board will pretty much be forced to do the same thing.