Welcome to our dedicated page for Gamestop SEC filings (Ticker: GME), a comprehensive resource for investors and traders seeking official regulatory documents including 10-K annual reports, 10-Q quarterly earnings, 8-K material events, and insider trading forms.
GameStop Corp. (NYSE: GME) files a wide range of documents with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission that shed light on its retail operations, capital structure, and governance. For investors analyzing GME, these SEC filings explain how the company reports financial performance, structures its securities, and discloses material events.
GameStop’s periodic reports, including Forms 10-K and 10-Q referenced in its press releases and 8-Ks, contain consolidated financial statements, segment data for the United States, Canada, Australia, and Europe, and discussions of risks such as competition in the video game industry, supply chain challenges, and volatility in investment holdings like Bitcoin. These filings also detail net sales, cost of sales, gross profit, SG&A, asset impairments, operating income, and non-GAAP reconciliations.
Numerous Form 8-K filings document specific events. Examples include the announcement of quarterly results, the creation and expansion of 0.00% Convertible Senior Notes due 2032, and the declaration and implementation of a warrant dividend distribution. The 8-Ks describing the warrant distribution explain eligibility, the one-for-ten warrant ratio, the $32.00 exercise price per warrant, the expected NYSE listing under ticker GME WS, and the Warrant Agreement governing anti-dilution adjustments and expiration.
Other 8-Ks cover executive and board matters, such as a continuing employment offer letter for an executive that outlines equity awards, cash bonuses, and severance protections, and the CEO Performance Award, a 100% performance-based nonqualified stock option subject to stockholder approval. These documents provide detail on vesting conditions, performance hurdles, and the alignment of compensation with market capitalization and cumulative performance EBITDA.
On this SEC filings page, Stock Titan surfaces GameStop’s latest 8-Ks, 10-Qs, 10-Ks, and related exhibits, along with AI-powered summaries that highlight key terms, financial metrics, and structural features of notes, warrants, and equity awards. Investors can use these tools to quickly understand complex instruments, track new filings as they appear on EDGAR, and review how GameStop’s disclosures evolve over time.
GameStop Corp. filed a current report describing a performance-based stock option award agreement entered into with Chairman and CEO Ryan Cohen. The option award agreement itself is provided as an exhibit for investors to review the detailed terms of the CEO Performance Award.
The company plans to call a Special Meeting of stockholders to vote on approval of the CEO Performance Award. GameStop expects to file a proxy statement on Schedule 14A with the SEC for this Special Meeting, which will explain the award structure, conditions and board rationale in more detail. Stockholders will be able to access the proxy materials and related filings for free on the SEC’s website and through GameStop’s investor relations site.
GameStop Corp. reported that on January 6, 2026 it granted a 100% performance-based nonqualified stock option award (the “CEO Performance Award”) to its Chief Executive Officer and Executive Chairman, Ryan Cohen, subject to approval at a meeting of stockholders. The company disclosed that it will hold a special meeting of stockholders to vote on this award.
GameStop plans to file and distribute a proxy statement describing the CEO Performance Award and related matters, and is urging stockholders to read it and any future amendments when available. The company noted that its directors and executive officers may be deemed participants in the proxy solicitation for the special meeting, and included customary cautionary language regarding forward-looking statements and risk factors referenced in its prior SEC reports.
GameStop Corp.'s General Counsel and Secretary reported an automatic sale of company stock tied to tax withholding. On 01/02/2026, the officer sold 5,475 shares of Class A common stock at a price of $20.4386 per share. According to the disclosure, these shares were sold to cover applicable withholding taxes from the vesting of restricted stock units and did not represent a discretionary trade. After this transaction, the officer beneficially owned 117,355 shares of GameStop common stock.
GameStop Corp. officer Daniel Moore, listed as PFO and PAO, reported an insider transaction involving Class A common stock. On 01/02/2026, he sold 5,477 shares at a price of $20.4386 per share. After this transaction, Moore directly beneficially owned 108,224 shares of GameStop common stock.
The filing explains that the shares were sold to cover applicable withholding taxes in connection with the vesting of restricted stock units, and that this sale does not represent a discretionary trade by the reporting person.
An affiliate of the issuer filed a Rule 144 notice to sell 5,477 shares of common stock through Morgan Stanley Smith Barney LLC on the NYSE. The filing shows 448,009,480 shares outstanding of this class of stock. The shares relate to restricted stock units that vested on 01/02/2026 under an issuer employee stock plan, with the sale described as covering withholding taxes and not a discretionary trade by the reporting person. The underlying award involved 12,937 shares, acquired and paid for on 01/02/2026 as an employee stock award. Over the prior three months, the same holder sold 6,509 shares of common stock on 10/02/2025 for gross proceeds of $179,534.53.
GameStop (GME) insider plans a small share sale tied to tax withholding. A person related to the company filed a notice to sell 5,475 shares of common stock through Morgan Stanley Smith Barney LLC on the NYSE, with an aggregate market value of $109,938. The filing notes that 12,937 common shares came from restricted stock units that vested under an employee stock award plan, and the sale represents shares sold to cover withholding taxes when those units vested, not a discretionary trade by the reporting person.
The filer also reported a prior sale of 4,449 common shares on 10/02/2025 for gross proceeds of $122,714.56. GameStop had 448,009,480 common shares outstanding at the time referenced, so the planned and recent sales represent a very small portion of the company’s total equity.
GameStop Corp. reported that an executive officer, serving as Principal Financial Officer and Principal Accounting Officer, acquired 1,081 shares of Class A common stock on 12/23/2025 through a grant of restricted stock units at a price of $21.38 per share. Following this grant, the officer beneficially owns 113,701 shares directly.
The filing explains that these restricted stock units were granted in connection with GameStop’s distribution of warrants to its stockholders and convertible noteholders on October 7, 2025. The units are scheduled to vest in seven quarterly installments from January 1, 2026 through July 1, 2027, conditioned on the officer’s continuous service with the company through each vesting date.
GameStop Corp. reported an equity grant to a senior executive. On 12/23/2025, the company’s General Counsel and Secretary received 967 shares of Class A common stock as an acquired position at a reported price of $21.38 per share. Following this transaction, the reporting person beneficially owned 122,830 shares of GameStop common stock in direct ownership.
The filing explains that these 967 shares represent restricted stock units granted in connection with GameStop’s distribution of warrants to its stockholders and convertible noteholders on October 7, 2025. The restricted stock units are scheduled to vest in seven quarterly installments beginning on January 1, 2026 and ending on July 1, 2027, conditioned on the executive’s continued service with GameStop through each vesting date.
GameStop Corp. reported an equity award to its General Counsel and Secretary on a regulatory Form 4. On 12/09/2025, the officer acquired 9,561 shares of Class A common stock at a price of $21.84 per share, increasing the officer’s directly held stake to 121,863 shares after the transaction.
The new shares come from a grant of restricted stock units. These units are scheduled to vest in seven quarterly installments beginning on January 1, 2026 and ending on July 1, 2027, and each vesting date requires the officer to remain in continuous service with GameStop. This reflects ongoing equity-based compensation for a key executive rather than an open-market purchase or sale.
GameStop Corp. reported a sharp profit improvement for the quarter and year-to-date while reshaping its balance sheet and business mix. For the quarter ended November 1, 2025, net sales slipped to $821.0 million from $860.3 million, but net income rose to $77.1 million from $17.4 million as gross margin expanded and selling, general and administrative costs fell.
For the first nine months of fiscal 2025, net income reached $290.5 million on net sales of $2,525.6 million, compared with essentially breakeven results a year earlier. Cash and cash equivalents increased to $7,842.7 million, supported by $4,200.0 million of new zero‑coupon convertible notes due 2030 and 2032, which lifted total debt to $4,162.6 million. The company also adopted a broader investment policy, including holding 4,710 Bitcoin with a fair value of $519.4 million, and distributed equity-classified warrants valued at $173.9 million, while continuing to exit underperforming international operations such as Canada and planning a sale of France.