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Shares of U.S. online marketplace eBay (EBAY.O) jumped 10% but were well below GameStop's offer price in premarket trading on Monday, in ​a sign of doubts among investors that the $56-billion bid from ‌the much smaller videogame retailer will succeed.

GameStop offered $125 per eBay share, split evenly between cash and stock, representing a roughly 20% premium to eBay's Friday close. GameStop ​shares were down about 3%.

Its CEO Ryan Cohen said he ​is prepared to take the bid directly to eBay's shareholders ⁠and pursue a proxy fight if the online retailer's board resists.

Bernstein ​analysts flagged significant financing challenges, given GameStop's smaller balance sheet and the ​scale of debt and equity that would be required to buy eBay. The brokerage said they would be "even more surprised if anything became of it".

GameStop has already built ​a 5% stake in eBay through shares and derivatives, but eBay's ​market capitalization is nearly four times larger than GameStop.

The videogame retailer, which had total debt ‌of $4.16 ⁠billion as of Jan. 31, said it has lined up around $20 billion in debt. Cohen said the cash portion of the offer would be funded through existing liquidity and third-party financing.

Cohen, a central figure in the ​2021 meme-stock frenzy, ​said combining the ⁠two companies could unlock $2 billion in annualized cost cuts and turn eBay into a stronger rival to Amazon (AMZN.O) ​by leveraging GameStop's 1,600 U.S. stores.

Roundhill's MEME exchange ​traded fund (MEME.P) ⁠rose 2.3%.

Michael Burry, best known for predicting the 2008 financial crisis, said in a Substack post on Saturday a full acquisition would be a stretch ⁠for GameStop, ​citing the stark disparity in valuation as ​speculation around a deal intensified.

GameStop and eBay shares have gained 32.1% and 19.5%, respectively, so ​far this year.


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