GameStop to close ‘significant number’ of stores in 2025 and invest in bitcoin

March 27, 2025

GRAPEVINE, TexasGameStop said it anticipates closing a “significant number” of additional stores in 2025 and announced plans to invest in bitcoin. 

The video game retailer this week revised its investment policy, paving the way for the bitcoin move. Here’s what to know:

What we know:

GameStop announced in a regulatory filing on Tuesday that it anticipates closing a “significant number” of stores this year. The company also announced the revision of its investment policy to include bitcoin “as a treasury reserve asset.” 

What we don’t know:

It’s unclear which stores in particular will close. 

Dig deeper:

GameStop said a “portion of our cash or future debt and equity issuances may be invested in Bitcoin” now that its investment policy has been changed, according to a Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) filing. 

“The overall goals of the Investment Policy are to provide sufficient liquidity to meet the day-to-day financial obligations of the Company, and to optimize investment returns within the guidelines of the Investment Policy,” GameStop said.

The update to its investment policy was a unanimous decision by its board, which includes CEO Ryan Cohen and five others. 

The backstory:

The investment policy update comes after reports last month suggested GameStop was mulling an entry into cryptocurrency. The company has been working to boost the profitability of its retail business. It operated some 3,200 stores globally at the end of the fourth quarter, nearly 970 fewer than it did a year ago.

By the numbers:

GameStop generated $1.28 billion in net sales during the final quarter of its fiscal year, marking a 28.5% decline year-over-year. Its net income, however, grew to $131.1 million. For the fiscal year, the retailer said it saw $3.82 billion in net sales and $131.3 million in net income.

The price of bitcoin, meanwhile, hovered just above $87,000 as of Wednesday morning.

The Source: This story was written based on information published by GameStop, based in Grapevine, Texas, in an SEC filing as well as public press releases. It was reported from Cincinnati, and FOX Business contributed.